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2008 | Buch

Analysis II

verfasst von: Herbert Amann, Joachim Escher

Verlag: Birkhäuser Basel

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Über dieses Buch

As with the ?rst, the secondvolume containssubstantially morematerialthancan be covered in a one-semester course. Such courses may omit many beautiful and well-grounded applications which connect broadly to many areas of mathematics. We of course hope that students will pursue this material independently; teachers may ?nd it useful for undergraduate seminars. For an overview of the material presented, consult the table of contents and the chapter introductions. As before, we stress that doing the numerous exercises is indispensable for understanding the subject matter, and they also round out and amplify the main text. In writing this volume, we are indebted to the help of many. We especially thank our friends and colleages Pavol Quittner and Gieri Simonett. They have not only meticulously reviewed the entire manuscript and assisted in weeding out errors but also, through their valuable suggestions for improvement, contributed essentially to the ?nal version. We also extend great thanks to our sta? for their careful perusal of the entire manuscript and for tracking errata and inaccuracies. Our most heartfelt thank extends again to our “typesetting perfectionist”, 1 without whose tireless e?ort this book would not look nearly so nice. We also thank Andreas for helping resolve hardware and software problems. Finally, we extend thanks to Thomas Hintermann and to Birkh¨ auser for the good working relationship and their understanding of our desired deadlines.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter VI. Integral calculus in one variable
Abstract
Integration was invented for finding the area of shapes. This, of course, is an ancient problem, and the basic strategy for solving it is equally old: divide the shape into rectangles and add up their areas.
Chapter VII. Multivariable differential calculus
Abstract
In Volume I, we used the differential calculus to extract deep insight about the “fine structure” of functions. In that process, the idea of linear approximations proved to be extremely effective. However, we have until now concentrated on functions of one variable.
Chapter VIII. Line integrals
Abstract
In this chapter, we return to the theory of integrating functions of a real variable. We will now consider integrals which are not only over intervals but also over continuously differentiable maps of intervals, namely, curves. We will see that this generalization of the integral has important and profound consequences.
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Analysis II
verfasst von
Herbert Amann
Joachim Escher
Copyright-Jahr
2008
Verlag
Birkhäuser Basel
Electronic ISBN
978-3-7643-7478-5
Print ISBN
978-3-7643-7472-3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7643-7478-5