Cohomological Methods in Transformation Groups

Cohomological Methods in Transformation Groups
Author: C. Allday
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 486
Release: 1993-07
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0521350220

This is an account of the theory of certain types of compact transformation groups, namely those that are susceptible to study using ordinary cohomology theory and rational homotopy theory, which in practice means the torus groups and elementary abelian p-groups. The efforts of many mathematicians have combined to bring a depth of understanding to this area. However to make it reasonably accessible to a wide audience, the authors have streamlined the presentation, referring the reader to the literature for purely technical results and working in a simplified setting where possible. In this way the reader with a relatively modest background in algebraic topology and homology theory can penetrate rather deeply into the subject, whilst the book at the same time makes a useful reference for the more specialised reader.

Geometry of Manifolds

Geometry of Manifolds
Author:
Publisher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2011-08-29
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0080873278

Geometry of Manifolds

Geometry of Manifolds

Geometry of Manifolds
Author: Richard L. Bishop
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2001
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821829238

From the Preface of the First Edition: ``Our purpose in writing this book is to put material which we found stimulating and interesting as graduate students into form. It is intended for individual study and for use as a text for graduate level courses such as the one from which this material stems, given by Professor W. Ambrose at MIT in 1958-1959. Previously the material had been organized in roughly the same form by him and Professor I. M. Singer, and they in turn drew upon thework of Ehresmann, Chern, and E. Cartan. Our contributions have been primarily to fill out the material with details, asides and problems, and to alter notation slightly. ``We believe that this subject matter, besides being an interesting area for specialization, lends itself especially to a synthesisof several branches of mathematics, and thus should be studied by a wide spectrum of graduate students so as to break away from narrow specialization and see how their own fields are related and applied in other fields. We feel that at least part of this subject should be of interest not only to those working in geometry, but also to those in analysis, topology, algebra, and even probability and astronomy. In order that this book be meaningful, the reader's background should include realvariable theory, linear algebra, and point set topology.'' This volume is a reprint with few corrections of the original work published in 1964. Starting with the notion of differential manifolds, the first six chapters lay a foundation for the study of Riemannian manifolds through specializing the theoryof connections on principle bundles and affine connections. The geometry of Riemannian manifolds is emphasized, as opposed to global analysis, so that the theorems of Hopf-Rinow, Hadamard-Cartan, and Cartan's local isometry theorem are included, but no elliptic operator theory. Isometric immersions are treated elegantly and from a global viewpoint. In the final chapter are the more complicated estimates on which much of the research in Riemannian geometry is based: the Morse index theorem,Synge's theorems on closed geodesics, Rauch's comparison theorem, and the original proof of the Bishop volume-comparison theorem (with Myer's Theorem as a corollary). The first edition of this book was the origin of a modern treatment of global Riemannian geometry, using the carefully conceived notationthat has withstood the test of time. The primary source material for the book were the papers and course notes of brilliant geometers, including E. Cartan, C. Ehresmann, I. M. Singer, and W. Ambrose. It is tightly organized, uniformly very precise, and amazingly comprehensive for its length.

Characteristic Classes

Characteristic Classes
Author: John Willard Milnor
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 342
Release: 1974
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9780691081229

The theory of characteristic classes provides a meeting ground for the various disciplines of differential topology, differential and algebraic geometry, cohomology, and fiber bundle theory. As such, it is a fundamental and an essential tool in the study of differentiable manifolds. In this volume, the authors provide a thorough introduction to characteristic classes, with detailed studies of Stiefel-Whitney classes, Chern classes, Pontrjagin classes, and the Euler class. Three appendices cover the basics of cohomology theory and the differential forms approach to characteristic classes, and provide an account of Bernoulli numbers. Based on lecture notes of John Milnor, which first appeared at Princeton University in 1957 and have been widely studied by graduate students of topology ever since, this published version has been completely revised and corrected.

Differentiable Periodic Maps

Differentiable Periodic Maps
Author: Pierre E. Conner
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 155
Release: 2013-12-14
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 3662416336

This research tract contains an exposition of our research on bordism and differentiable periodic maps done in the period 1960-62. The research grew out of the conviction, not ours alone, that the subject of transformation groups is in need of a large infusion of the modern methods of algebraic topology. This conviction we owe at least in part to Armand Borel; in particular Borel has maintained the desirability of methods in transformation groups that use differentiability in a key fashion [9, Introduction], and that is what we try to supply here. We do not try to relate our work to Smith theory, the homological study of periodic maps due to such a large extent to P. A. Smith; for a modern development of that subject which expands it greatly see the Borel Seminar notes [9]. It appears to us that our work is independent of Smith theory, but in part inspired by it. We owe a particular debt to G. D. Mostow, who pointed out to us some time ago that it followed from Smith theory that an involution on a compact manifold, or a map of prime period [italic lowercase]p on a compact orientable manifold, could not have precisely one fixed point. It was this fact that led us to believe it worthwhile to apply cobordism to periodic maps.

Differential Geometry: Partial Differential Equations on Manifolds

Differential Geometry: Partial Differential Equations on Manifolds
Author: Robert Everist Greene
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 585
Release: 1993
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 082181494X

The first of three parts comprising Volume 54, the proceedings of the Summer Research Institute on Differential Geometry, held at the University of California, Los Angeles, July 1990 (ISBN for the set is 0-8218-1493-1). Part 1 begins with a problem list by S.T. Yau, successor to his 1980 list ( Sem

Geometry of Manifolds

Geometry of Manifolds
Author: K. Shiohama
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 536
Release: 1989-10-04
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0080925782

This volume contains the papers presented at a symposium on differential geometry at Shinshu University in July of 1988. Carefully reviewed by a panel of experts, the papers pertain to the following areas of research: dynamical systems, geometry of submanifolds and tensor geometry, lie sphere geometry, Riemannian geometry, Yang-Mills Connections, and geometry of the Laplace operator.

Exterior Differential Systems

Exterior Differential Systems
Author: Robert L. Bryant
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 483
Release: 2013-06-29
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 1461397146

This book gives a treatment of exterior differential systems. It will in clude both the general theory and various applications. An exterior differential system is a system of equations on a manifold defined by equating to zero a number of exterior differential forms. When all the forms are linear, it is called a pfaffian system. Our object is to study its integral manifolds, i. e. , submanifolds satisfying all the equations of the system. A fundamental fact is that every equation implies the one obtained by exterior differentiation, so that the complete set of equations associated to an exterior differential system constitutes a differential ideal in the algebra of all smooth forms. Thus the theory is coordinate-free and computations typically have an algebraic character; however, even when coordinates are used in intermediate steps, the use of exterior algebra helps to efficiently guide the computations, and as a consequence the treatment adapts well to geometrical and physical problems. A system of partial differential equations, with any number of inde pendent and dependent variables and involving partial derivatives of any order, can be written as an exterior differential system. In this case we are interested in integral manifolds on which certain coordinates remain independent. The corresponding notion in exterior differential systems is the independence condition: certain pfaffian forms remain linearly indepen dent. Partial differential equations and exterior differential systems with an independence condition are essentially the same object.