Riemannian Geometry
β Scribed by Peter Petersen (auth.)
- Book ID
- 127423051
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 2 MB
- Edition
- 2nd ed
- Category
- Library
- City
- New York
- ISBN-13
- 9780387294032
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Intended for a one year course, this volume serves as a single source, introducing students to the important techniques and theorems, while also containing enough background on advanced topics to appeal to those students wishing to specialize in Riemannian geometry. This is one of the few works to combine both the geometric parts of Riemannian geometry and the analytic aspects of the theory, while also presenting the most up-to-date research. This book will appeal to readers with a knowledge of standard manifold theory, including such topics as tensors and Stokes theorem. Various exercises are scattered throughout the text, helping motivate readers to deepen their understanding of the subject.
Important additions to this new edition include:
* A completely new coordinate free formula that is easily remembered, and is, in fact, the Koszul formula in disguise;
* An increased number of coordinate calculations of connection and curvature;
* General fomulas for curvature on Lie Groups and submersions;
* Variational calculus has been integrated into the text, which allows for an early treatment of the Sphere theorem using a forgottten proof by Berger;
* Several recent results about manifolds with positive curvature.
From reviews of the first edition:
"The book can be highly recommended to all mathematicians who want to get a more profound idea about the most interesting
achievements in Riemannian geometry. It is one of the few comprehensive sources of this type."
- Bernd Wegner, Zentralblatt
β¦ Subjects
Differential Geometry
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This book is meant for a one year course in Riemannian Geometry. The approach the author has taken deviates in some ways from the standard path. Instead of discussing variational calculus, the author introduces a more elementary approach which simply uses standard calculus together with some tec
This text has been adopted at: University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia University of Connecticut, Storrs Duke University, Durham, NC California Institute of Technology, Pasadena University of Washington, Seattle Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA University of Chicago, IL University of Michigan, An
In his classic work of geometry, Euclid focused on the properties of flat surfaces. In the age of exploration, mapmakers such as Mercator had to concern themselves with the properties of spherical surfaces. The study of curved surfaces, or non-Euclidean geometry, flowered in the late nineteenth cent