Spaces of Continuous Functions
Title | Spaces of Continuous Functions PDF eBook |
Author | G.L.M. Groenewegen |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 183 |
Release | 2016-06-17 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 9462392013 |
The space C(X) of all continuous functions on a compact space X carries the structure of a normed vector space, an algebra and a lattice. On the one hand we study the relations between these structures and the topology of X, on the other hand we discuss a number of classical results according to which an algebra or a vector lattice can be represented as a C(X). Various applications of these theorems are given.Some attention is devoted to related theorems, e.g. the Stone Theorem for Boolean algebras and the Riesz Representation Theorem.The book is functional analytic in character. It does not presuppose much knowledge of functional analysis; it contains introductions into subjects such as the weak topology, vector lattices and (some) integration theory.
Topological Properties of Spaces of Continuous Functions
Title | Topological Properties of Spaces of Continuous Functions PDF eBook |
Author | Robert A. McCoy |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 128 |
Release | 2006-12-08 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 3540391819 |
This book brings together into a general setting various techniques in the study of the topological properties of spaces of continuous functions. The two major classes of function space topologies studied are the set-open topologies and the uniform topologies. Where appropriate, the analogous theorems for the two major classes of topologies are studied together, so that a comparison can be made. A chapter on cardinal functions puts characterizations of a number of topological properties of function spaces into a more general setting: some of these results are new, others are generalizations of known theorems. Excercises are included at the end of each chapter, covering other kinds of function space topologies. Thus the book should be appropriate for use in a classroom setting as well as for functional analysis and general topology. The only background needed is some basic knowledge of general topology.
Schauder Bases in Banach Spaces of Continuous Functions
Title | Schauder Bases in Banach Spaces of Continuous Functions PDF eBook |
Author | Z. Semadeni |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 142 |
Release | 2006-11-14 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 3540391436 |
Rings of Continuous Functions
Title | Rings of Continuous Functions PDF eBook |
Author | Leonard Gillman |
Publisher | Courier Dover Publications |
Pages | 321 |
Release | 2018-01-16 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 0486816885 |
Designed as a text as well as a treatise, the first systematic account of the theory of rings of continuous functions remains the basic graduate-level book in this area. 1960 edition.
Sobolev Spaces
Title | Sobolev Spaces PDF eBook |
Author | Vladimir Maz'ya |
Publisher | Springer Science & Business Media |
Pages | 882 |
Release | 2011-02-11 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 3642155642 |
Sobolev spaces play an outstanding role in modern analysis, in particular, in the theory of partial differential equations and its applications in mathematical physics. They form an indispensable tool in approximation theory, spectral theory, differential geometry etc. The theory of these spaces is of interest in itself being a beautiful domain of mathematics. The present volume includes basics on Sobolev spaces, approximation and extension theorems, embedding and compactness theorems, their relations with isoperimetric and isocapacitary inequalities, capacities with applications to spectral theory of elliptic differential operators as well as pointwise inequalities for derivatives. The selection of topics is mainly influenced by the author’s involvement in their study, a considerable part of the text is a report on his work in the field. Part of this volume first appeared in German as three booklets of Teubner-Texte zur Mathematik (1979, 1980). In the Springer volume “Sobolev Spaces”, published in English in 1985, the material was expanded and revised. The present 2nd edition is enhanced by many recent results and it includes new applications to linear and nonlinear partial differential equations. New historical comments, five new chapters and a significantly augmented list of references aim to create a broader and modern view of the area.
Introduction to Metric and Topological Spaces
Title | Introduction to Metric and Topological Spaces PDF eBook |
Author | Wilson A Sutherland |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 219 |
Release | 2009-06-18 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 0191568309 |
One of the ways in which topology has influenced other branches of mathematics in the past few decades is by putting the study of continuity and convergence into a general setting. This new edition of Wilson Sutherland's classic text introduces metric and topological spaces by describing some of that influence. The aim is to move gradually from familiar real analysis to abstract topological spaces, using metric spaces as a bridge between the two. The language of metric and topological spaces is established with continuity as the motivating concept. Several concepts are introduced, first in metric spaces and then repeated for topological spaces, to help convey familiarity. The discussion develops to cover connectedness, compactness and completeness, a trio widely used in the rest of mathematics. Topology also has a more geometric aspect which is familiar in popular expositions of the subject as `rubber-sheet geometry', with pictures of Möbius bands, doughnuts, Klein bottles and the like; this geometric aspect is illustrated by describing some standard surfaces, and it is shown how all this fits into the same story as the more analytic developments. The book is primarily aimed at second- or third-year mathematics students. There are numerous exercises, many of the more challenging ones accompanied by hints, as well as a companion website, with further explanations and examples as well as material supplementary to that in the book.
A Course on Borel Sets
Title | A Course on Borel Sets PDF eBook |
Author | S.M. Srivastava |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 271 |
Release | 2013-12-01 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 3642854737 |
The roots of Borel sets go back to the work of Baire [8]. He was trying to come to grips with the abstract notion of a function introduced by Dirich let and Riemann. According to them, a function was to be an arbitrary correspondence between objects without giving any method or procedure by which the correspondence could be established. Since all the specific functions that one studied were determined by simple analytic expressions, Baire delineated those functions that can be constructed starting from con tinuous functions and iterating the operation 0/ pointwise limit on a se quence 0/ functions. These functions are now known as Baire functions. Lebesgue [65] and Borel [19] continued this work. In [19], Borel sets were defined for the first time. In his paper, Lebesgue made a systematic study of Baire functions and introduced many tools and techniques that are used even today. Among other results, he showed that Borel functions coincide with Baire functions. The study of Borel sets got an impetus from an error in Lebesgue's paper, which was spotted by Souslin. Lebesgue was trying to prove the following: Suppose / : )R2 -- R is a Baire function such that for every x, the equation /(x,y) = 0 has a. unique solution. Then y as a function 0/ x defined by the above equation is Baire.