Paperback : £55.76
This is the second edition of this best selling problem book for students, now containing over 400 completely solved exercises on differentiable manifolds, Lie theory, fibre bundles and Riemannian manifolds. The exercises go from elementary computations to rather sophisticated tools. Many of the definitions and theorems used throughout are explained in the first section of each chapter where they appear. A 56-page collection of formulae is included which can be useful as an aide-mémoire, even for teachers and researchers on those topics. In this 2nd edition: ¿ 76 new problems ¿ a section devoted to a generalization of Gauss¿ Lemma ¿ a short novel section dealing with some properties of the energy of Hopf vector fields ¿ an expanded collection of formulae and tables ¿ an extended bibliography Audience This book will be useful to advanced undergraduate and graduate students of mathematics, theoretical physics and some branches of engineering with a rudimentary knowledge of linear and multilinear algebra.
Professor Pedro M. Gadea taught at the Universities of Santiago de Compostela and Valladolid, Spain. He is now a scientific researcher at the Instituto de Física Fundamental, CSIC, Madrid, Spain. He has published more than sixty research papers on several topics of differential geometry, algebraic topology and automatic speech recognition. He has also been advisor of four PhD theses. His current interests are in differential geometry, and specifically in Riemannian, Kähler, quaternion-Kähler and Spin(9) manifolds and structures, and their applications to supergravity. Outside of mathematics, his chief interests are history and minerals.
Professor J Muñoz Masqué taught at the University of Salamanca, Spain. He is currently a scientific researcher at the Instituto de Seguridad de la Información (ISI), CSIC, Madrid, Spain. He has written more than one hundred research articles on calculus of variations, Riemannian geometry, differential invariants, gauge theories, and public key cryptography, and he is currently studying on these topics. Outside of mathematics, his chief interests is Spanish poetry.
Professor Ihor Mykytyuk teaches at the Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland. He is Head of Department at the Pidstryhach Institute of Applied Problems of Mechanics and Mathematics, NASU, L'viv, Ukraine. He has published more than thirty research papers on several topics of differential geometry, Lie groups theory and integrable dynamical systems. He is a co-author of two monographs on these topics. His current interests are in differential geometry and Lie groups theory, and specifically in Riemannian, Kähler, hyper-Kähler and Spin(9) structures possessing rich groups of symmetries. Outside of mathematics, his main interests are history and bicycle travels.
Differentiable manifolds.- Tensor Fields and Differential Forms.- Integration on Manifolds.- Lie Groups.- Fibre Bundles.- Riemannian Geometry.- Some Formulas and Tables.
Show moreThis is the second edition of this best selling problem book for students, now containing over 400 completely solved exercises on differentiable manifolds, Lie theory, fibre bundles and Riemannian manifolds. The exercises go from elementary computations to rather sophisticated tools. Many of the definitions and theorems used throughout are explained in the first section of each chapter where they appear. A 56-page collection of formulae is included which can be useful as an aide-mémoire, even for teachers and researchers on those topics. In this 2nd edition: ¿ 76 new problems ¿ a section devoted to a generalization of Gauss¿ Lemma ¿ a short novel section dealing with some properties of the energy of Hopf vector fields ¿ an expanded collection of formulae and tables ¿ an extended bibliography Audience This book will be useful to advanced undergraduate and graduate students of mathematics, theoretical physics and some branches of engineering with a rudimentary knowledge of linear and multilinear algebra.
Professor Pedro M. Gadea taught at the Universities of Santiago de Compostela and Valladolid, Spain. He is now a scientific researcher at the Instituto de Física Fundamental, CSIC, Madrid, Spain. He has published more than sixty research papers on several topics of differential geometry, algebraic topology and automatic speech recognition. He has also been advisor of four PhD theses. His current interests are in differential geometry, and specifically in Riemannian, Kähler, quaternion-Kähler and Spin(9) manifolds and structures, and their applications to supergravity. Outside of mathematics, his chief interests are history and minerals.
Professor J Muñoz Masqué taught at the University of Salamanca, Spain. He is currently a scientific researcher at the Instituto de Seguridad de la Información (ISI), CSIC, Madrid, Spain. He has written more than one hundred research articles on calculus of variations, Riemannian geometry, differential invariants, gauge theories, and public key cryptography, and he is currently studying on these topics. Outside of mathematics, his chief interests is Spanish poetry.
Professor Ihor Mykytyuk teaches at the Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland. He is Head of Department at the Pidstryhach Institute of Applied Problems of Mechanics and Mathematics, NASU, L'viv, Ukraine. He has published more than thirty research papers on several topics of differential geometry, Lie groups theory and integrable dynamical systems. He is a co-author of two monographs on these topics. His current interests are in differential geometry and Lie groups theory, and specifically in Riemannian, Kähler, hyper-Kähler and Spin(9) structures possessing rich groups of symmetries. Outside of mathematics, his main interests are history and bicycle travels.
Differentiable manifolds.- Tensor Fields and Differential Forms.- Integration on Manifolds.- Lie Groups.- Fibre Bundles.- Riemannian Geometry.- Some Formulas and Tables.
Show moreDifferentiable manifolds.- Tensor Fields and Differential Forms.- Integration on Manifolds.- Lie Groups.- Fibre Bundles.- Riemannian Geometry.- Some Formulas and Tables.
Professor Pedro M. Gadea taught at the Universities of Santiago de Compostela and Valladolid, Spain. He is now a scientific researcher at the Instituto de Física Fundamental, CSIC, Madrid, Spain. He has published more than sixty research papers on several topics of differential geometry, algebraic topology and automatic speech recognition. He has also been advisor of four PhD theses. His current interests are in differential geometry, and specifically in Riemannian, Kähler, quaternion-Kähler and Spin(9) manifolds and structures, and their applications to supergravity. Outside of mathematics, his chief interests are history and minerals.
Professor J Muñoz Masqué taught at the University of Salamanca, Spain. He is currently a scientific researcher at the Instituto de Seguridad de la Información (ISI), CSIC, Madrid, Spain. He has written more than one hundred research articles on calculus of variations, Riemannian geometry, differential invariants, gauge theories, and public key cryptography, and he is currently studying on these topics. Outside of mathematics, his chief interests is Spanish poetry.
Professor Ihor Mykytyuk teaches at the Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland. He is Head of Department at the Pidstryhach Institute of Applied Problems of Mechanics and Mathematics, NASU, L'viv, Ukraine. He has published more than thirty research papers on several topics of differential geometry, Lie groups theory and integrable dynamical systems. He is a co-author of two monographs on these topics. His current interests are in differential geometry and Lie groups theory, and specifically in Riemannian, Kähler, hyper-Kähler and Spin(9) structures possessing rich groups of symmetries. Outside of mathematics, his main interests are history and bicycle travels.
The authors have made quite a few interesting and timely additions
to their first edition including an elegant proof of the fact that
the real projective plane minus a point is diffeomorphic with the
infinite Mobius strip, and expanded coverage of Hamiltonian and
Hopf vector fields. Professors Gadea, Masqué and Mykytyuk have
produced a workbook that appears to be an equally useful supplement
for either a primarily theoretical or an application oriented
course on differential geometry or differential topology. This
exceptional workbook puts me in mind of a mightily enhanced
Schaum’s outline, and I have an abiding respect for the educational
value of the Schaum’s series. A mastery of the material in this
workbook would, I think, stand as compelling evidence of a very
strong grounding in the fundamentals of modern differential
geometry and related areas. The authors deserve kudos for this
admirable contribution to Springer’s Problem Books in Mathematics
series. It is bound to be an excellent learning tool for students
of differential geometry and differential topology at any level as
well as a handy reference for experts in these fields. In the
gallery of scientific self-help literature, in which kitsch
abounds, this workbook certainly qualifies as high art. One thing
for sure, when next I teach a course in differential geometry or
differential topology, I am certainly going to recommend this
workbook as a supplementary text. Denis Blackmore
Professor of Mathematical Sciences
New Jersey Institute of
Technology------------------------------------------------------------------------This
is the second edition of a book which first appeared in 2001 under
the name of the first two authors only. Its main intention is to
provide a large collection of worked-out problems and exercises on
modern differential geometry at an advanced undergraduate and
graduate level. The prerequisites are some knowledge of linearand
multilinear algebra, the calculus of several variables, point-set
topology and some acquaintance with the concept of a manifold and
the topology of fibre bundles.The book contains 412 solved problems
of varying degree of complexity and difficulty. They are spread
over the first six chapters which deal with, respectively, the
following topics: differentiable manifolds, tensor fields and
differential forms, integration on manifolds, Lie groups, fibre
bundles and Riemannian geometry. Each chapter starts with a brief
overview of the main definitions, concepts and properties of the
topic involved, and ends by making reference to some useful books
for further reading. The material is presented in a clear and lucid
way. With respect to the first edition, 39 problems have been
deleted and 76 new problems have been added with, among others,
some problems on symplectic geometry and Hamiltonian mechanics, on
the adjoint representation of a Lie group, on homogeneous spaces
related to the exceptional Lie group G_2, on the Godbillon-Vey
class, and on the structure of the Kodaira-Thurston manifold. The
final chapter, Chapter 7, provides an extended list of formulae
from the calculus on manifolds, and tables concerning important
spaces and Lie groups.This book, which is rather unique in its
kind, can be regarded as a valuable training book for everyone
interested in becoming acquainted with the language and techniques
of modern differential geometry. In particular, it can serve as a
most helpful tool, both for students and teachers of a course on
the subject. Moreover, the book is very nicely edited, containing
many illustrative figures.Frans Cantrijn
Department of Mathematics
Ghent
University------------------------------------------------------------------------Second
Edition[Reviewed by Fernando Q. Gouvêa, on 02/13/2013]The new
edition has an added author and is published in hard covers. The
authors tell us that 39problems have been deleted and 76 have been
added. Other changes include: The Einstein summation convention is
no longer used. (Hurray!) There is a section on what happens if one
drops the standard topological assumptions (Hausdorff and
second-countable) in the definition of a differentiable manifold.
Several of the more advanced sections (on Lie groups,
characteristic classes, connections) have been significantly
expanded. A final chapter gives a collection of formulas and tables
relevant to differential geometry. This book is an excellent
resource for teachers and students of these topics. © The
Mathematical Association of America, 2013. All rights
reserved.First Edition[Reviewed by Fernando Q. Gouvêa, on
04/13/2010]This is a collection of solved problems on
differentiable manifolds, Lie groups, and Riemannian geometry. It
is intended as a supplement rather than as a standalone text. There
are plenty of pictures to accompany the problems, including a few
in color. The solutions are detailed, with many calculations
written out in full, making some of the book's pages look like a
mass of symbols. The problems are complemented by two chapters, at
the end of the book, intended to help orient the reader. The first
is a kind of "fascicule de resultats": a collection of definitions
and theorems. For most users of the book, the main role of this
chapter will be to fix notation. Chapter 8, "Some Formulas and
Tables," is more interesting. It collects such things as the
general formula for stereographic projection, formulas for Lie
derivatives and wedge products of differential forms, and lists of
the classical groups and their Lie algebras. I find this chapter
very useful, both in solving the problems in the book and as a
place to find information quickly when Wikipedia is not reachable.
I suspect the book will be particularly useful to instructors who
are not specialists in the subject; most of the results and
problems here arelikely to be familiar to those working in the
field. I would certainly want to have this book on hand if I were
to teach such a course. © The Mathematical Association of America,
2013. All rights reserved.
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