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Non-Euclidean Geometry in the Theory of Automorphic Functions.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: History of MathematicsPublisher: Providence : American Mathematical Society, 1999Copyright date: ©2000Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (109 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781470438852
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Non-Euclidean Geometry in the Theory of Automorphic FunctionsDDC classification:
  • 515/.9
LOC classification:
  • QA353.A9 H33 1999
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- Title page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction by the Publishers of the Russian Translation -- Historical introduction -- A brief history of automorphic function theory, 1880-1930 -- Chapter I. The group of motions of the hyperbolic plane and its properly discontinuous subgroups -- Chapter II. Discontinuous groups in three geometries. Fuchsian functions -- Chapter III. Fuchsian functions -- Chapter IV. Kleinian groups and functions -- Chapter V. Algebraic functions and linear algebraic differential equations -- Chapter VI. Fuchsian groups and geodesics -- References -- Additional references -- Back Cover.
Summary: This is the English translation of a volume originally published only in Russian and now out of print. The book was written by Jacques Hadamard on the work of Poincaré. Poincaré's creation of a theory of automorphic functions in the early 1880s was one of the most significant mathematical achievements of the nineteenth century. It directly inspired the uniformization theorem, led to a class of functions adequate to solve all linear ordinary differential equations, and focused attention on a large new class of discrete groups. It was the first significant application of non-Euclidean geometry. The implications of these discoveries continue to be important to this day in numerous different areas of mathematics. Hadamard begins with hyperbolic geometry, which he compares with plane and spherical geometry. He discusses the corresponding isometry groups, introduces the idea of discrete subgroups, and shows that the corresponding quotient spaces are manifolds. In Chapter 2 he presents the appropriate automorphic functions, in particular, Fuchsian functions. He shows how to represent Fuchsian functions as quotients, and how Fuchsian functions invariant under the same group are related, and indicates how these functions can be used to solve differential equations. Chapter 4 is devoted to the outlines of the more complicated Kleinian case. Chapter 5 discusses algebraic functions and linear algebraic differential equations, and the last chapter sketches the theory of Fuchsian groups and geodesics. This unique exposition by Hadamard offers a fascinating and intuitive introduction to the subject of automorphic functions and illuminates its connection to differential equations, a connection not often found in other texts. This volume is one of an informal sequence of works within the History of Mathematics series. Volumes in this subset, "Sources", areSummary: classical mathematical works that served as cornerstones for modern mathematical thought.
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Cover -- Title page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction by the Publishers of the Russian Translation -- Historical introduction -- A brief history of automorphic function theory, 1880-1930 -- Chapter I. The group of motions of the hyperbolic plane and its properly discontinuous subgroups -- Chapter II. Discontinuous groups in three geometries. Fuchsian functions -- Chapter III. Fuchsian functions -- Chapter IV. Kleinian groups and functions -- Chapter V. Algebraic functions and linear algebraic differential equations -- Chapter VI. Fuchsian groups and geodesics -- References -- Additional references -- Back Cover.

This is the English translation of a volume originally published only in Russian and now out of print. The book was written by Jacques Hadamard on the work of Poincaré. Poincaré's creation of a theory of automorphic functions in the early 1880s was one of the most significant mathematical achievements of the nineteenth century. It directly inspired the uniformization theorem, led to a class of functions adequate to solve all linear ordinary differential equations, and focused attention on a large new class of discrete groups. It was the first significant application of non-Euclidean geometry. The implications of these discoveries continue to be important to this day in numerous different areas of mathematics. Hadamard begins with hyperbolic geometry, which he compares with plane and spherical geometry. He discusses the corresponding isometry groups, introduces the idea of discrete subgroups, and shows that the corresponding quotient spaces are manifolds. In Chapter 2 he presents the appropriate automorphic functions, in particular, Fuchsian functions. He shows how to represent Fuchsian functions as quotients, and how Fuchsian functions invariant under the same group are related, and indicates how these functions can be used to solve differential equations. Chapter 4 is devoted to the outlines of the more complicated Kleinian case. Chapter 5 discusses algebraic functions and linear algebraic differential equations, and the last chapter sketches the theory of Fuchsian groups and geodesics. This unique exposition by Hadamard offers a fascinating and intuitive introduction to the subject of automorphic functions and illuminates its connection to differential equations, a connection not often found in other texts. This volume is one of an informal sequence of works within the History of Mathematics series. Volumes in this subset, "Sources", are

classical mathematical works that served as cornerstones for modern mathematical thought.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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