Q-series

Q-series
Author: George E. Andrews
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 146
Release: 1986-01-01
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9780821889114

q-series

q-series
Author: George Eyre Andrews
Publisher:
Total Pages: 130
Release: 1986
Genre:
ISBN: 9780821807163

$q$-Series: Their Development and Application in Analysis, Number Theory, Combinatorics, Physics and Computer Algebra

$q$-Series: Their Development and Application in Analysis, Number Theory, Combinatorics, Physics and Computer Algebra
Author: George E. Andrews
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 144
Release: 1986
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821807161

Integrates developments and related applications in $q$-series with a historical development of the field. This book develops important analytic topics (Bailey chains, integrals, and constant terms) and applications to additive number theory.

$q$-Series with Applications to Combinatorics, Number Theory, and Physics

$q$-Series with Applications to Combinatorics, Number Theory, and Physics
Author: Bruce C. Berndt
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2001
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821827464

The subject of $q$-series can be said to begin with Euler and his pentagonal number theorem. In fact, $q$-series are sometimes called Eulerian series. Contributions were made by Gauss, Jacobi, and Cauchy, but the first attempt at a systematic development, especially from the point of view of studying series with the products in the summands, was made by E. Heine in 1847. In the latter part of the nineteenth and in the early part of the twentieth centuries, two Englishmathematicians, L. J. Rogers and F. H. Jackson, made fundamental contributions. In 1940, G. H. Hardy described what we now call Ramanujan's famous $ 1\psi 1$ summation theorem as ``a remarkable formula with many parameters.'' This is now one of the fundamental theorems of the subject. Despite humble beginnings,the subject of $q$-series has flourished in the past three decades, particularly with its applications to combinatorics, number theory, and physics. During the year 2000, the University of Illinois embraced The Millennial Year in Number Theory. One of the events that year was the conference $q$-Series with Applications to Combinatorics, Number Theory, and Physics. This event gathered mathematicians from the world over to lecture and discuss their research. This volume presents nineteen of thepapers presented at the conference. The excellent lectures that are included chart pathways into the future and survey the numerous applications of $q$-series to combinatorics, number theory, and physics.

Dual Algebras with Applications to Invariant Subspaces and Dilation Theory

Dual Algebras with Applications to Invariant Subspaces and Dilation Theory
Author: Hari Bercovici
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 124
Release: 1985
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821807064

The theory of dual algebras has made tremendous progress since 1978, when Scott Brown originated some of the main ideas to solve the invariant subspace problem for subnormal operators. This book presents ideas concerning the solution of systems of simultaneous equations in the predual of a dual algebra, thereby developing a dilation theory.

Algebraic Analysis of Solvable Lattice Models

Algebraic Analysis of Solvable Lattice Models
Author: Michio Jimbo
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1995
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821803204

Based on the NSF-CBMS Regional Conference lectures presented by Miwa in June 1993, this book surveys recent developments in the interplay between solvable lattice models in statistical mechanics and representation theory of quantum affine algebras. Because results in this subject were scattered in the literature, this book fills the need for a systematic account, focusing attention on fundamentals without assuming prior knowledge about lattice models or representation theory. After a brief account of basic principles in statistical mechanics, the authors discuss the standard subjects concerning solvable lattice models in statistical mechanics, the main examples being the spin 1/2 XXZ chain and the six-vertex model. The book goes on to introduce the main objects of study, the corner transfer matrices and the vertex operators, and discusses some of their aspects from the viewpoint of physics. Once the physical motivations are in place, the authors return to the mathematics, covering the Frenkel-Jing bosonization of a certain module, formulas for the vertex operators using bosons, the role of representation theory, and correlation functions and form factors. The limit of the XXX model is briefly discussed, and the book closes with a discussion of other types of models and related works.