Several complex variables 02
โ Scribed by G. M. Khenkin, A. G. Vitushkin
- Book ID
- 127427946
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 2 MB
- Series
- Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences
- Category
- Library
- ISBN-13
- 9780387181752
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This volume of the Encyclopaedia contains four parts each of which being an informative survey of a topic in the field of several complex variables. The first deals with residue theory and its applications to integrals depending on parameters, combinatorial sums and systems of algebraic equations. The second part contains recent results in complex potential theory and the third part treats function theory in the unit ball covering research of the last twenty years. The latter part includes an up-to-date account of research related to a list of problems, which was published by Rudin in 1980. The last part of the book treats complex analysis in the future tube. The future tube is an important concept in mathematical physics, especially in axiomatic quantum field theory, and it is related to Penrose's work on "the complex geometry of the real world". Researchers and graduate students in complex analysis and mathematical physics will use this book as a reference and as a guide to exciting areas of research.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This volume of the Encyclopaedia contains three contributions in the field of complex analysis. The topics treated are mean periodicity and convolution equations, Yang-Mills fields and the Radon-Penrose transform, and string theory. The latter two have strong links with quantum field theory and the
The first contribution describes basic concepts, facts and problems of the modern theory of entire functions of several complex variables. The second contribution deals with analogies of basic Nevanlinna's theorems about the distribution of values in the multidimensional case and various application
The articles in this volume were written to commemorate Reinhold Remmert's 60th birthday in June, 1990. They are surveys, meant to facilitate access to some of the many aspects of the theory of complex manifolds, and demonstrate the interplay between complex analysis and many other branches of mathe