A Guide to Spectral Theory

A Guide to Spectral Theory
Author: Christophe Cheverry
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 258
Release: 2021-05-06
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 3030674622

This textbook provides a graduate-level introduction to the spectral theory of linear operators on Banach and Hilbert spaces, guiding readers through key components of spectral theory and its applications in quantum physics. Based on their extensive teaching experience, the authors present topics in a progressive manner so that each chapter builds on the ones preceding. Researchers and students alike will also appreciate the exploration of more advanced applications and research perspectives presented near the end of the book. Beginning with a brief introduction to the relationship between spectral theory and quantum physics, the authors go on to explore unbounded operators, analyzing closed, adjoint, and self-adjoint operators. Next, the spectrum of a closed operator is defined and the fundamental properties of Fredholm operators are introduced. The authors then develop the Grushin method to execute the spectral analysis of compact operators. The chapters that follow are devoted to examining Hille-Yoshida and Stone theorems, the spectral analysis of self-adjoint operators, and trace-class and Hilbert-Schmidt operators. The final chapter opens the discussion to several selected applications. Throughout this textbook, detailed proofs are given, and the statements are illustrated by a number of well-chosen examples. At the end, an appendix about foundational functional analysis theorems is provided to help the uninitiated reader. A Guide to Spectral Theory: Applications and Exercises is intended for graduate students taking an introductory course in spectral theory or operator theory. A background in linear functional analysis and partial differential equations is assumed; basic knowledge of bounded linear operators is useful but not required. PhD students and researchers will also find this volume to be of interest, particularly the research directions provided in later chapters.

Spectral Theory and Differential Operators

Spectral Theory and Differential Operators
Author: David Eric Edmunds
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 610
Release: 2018
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0198812051

This book is an updated version of the classic 1987 monograph "Spectral Theory and Differential Operators".The original book was a cutting edge account of the theory of bounded and closed linear operators in Banach and Hilbert spaces relevant to spectral problems involving differential equations. It is accessible to a graduate student as well as meeting the needs of seasoned researchers in mathematics and mathematical physics. This revised edition corrects various errors, and adds extensive notes to the end of each chapter which describe the considerable progress that has been made on the topic in the last 30 years.

Non-Associative Normed Algebras: Volume 2, Representation Theory and the Zel'manov Approach

Non-Associative Normed Algebras: Volume 2, Representation Theory and the Zel'manov Approach
Author: Miguel Cabrera García
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 759
Release: 2018-04-12
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 1108570763

This first systematic account of the basic theory of normed algebras, without assuming associativity, includes many new and unpublished results and is sure to become a central resource for researchers and graduate students in the field. This second volume revisits JB*-triples, covers Zel'manov's celebrated work in Jordan theory, proves the unit-free variant of the Vidav–Palmer theorem, and develops the representation theory of alternative C*-algebras and non-commutative JB*-algebras. This completes the work begun in the first volume, which introduced these algebras and discussed the so-called non-associative Gelfand–Naimark and Vidav–Palmer theorems. This book interweaves pure algebra, geometry of normed spaces, and infinite-dimensional complex analysis. Novel proofs are presented in complete detail at a level accessible to graduate students. The book contains a wealth of historical comments, background material, examples, and an extensive bibliography.

Spectral Theory of Linear Operators

Spectral Theory of Linear Operators
Author: Henry R. Dowson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 444
Release: 1978
Genre: Banach spaces
ISBN:

General spectral theory; Riesz operators; Hermitian operators; Prespectral operators; Well-bounded operators.

Lectures on Numerical Radius Inequalities

Lectures on Numerical Radius Inequalities
Author: Pintu Bhunia
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2022-11-18
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 3031136705

This book is a self-contained advanced monograph on inequalities involving the numerical radius of bounded linear operators acting on complex Hilbert spaces. The study of numerical range and numerical radius has a long and distinguished history starting from the Rayleigh quotients used in the 19th century to nowadays applications in quantum information theory and quantum computing. This monograph is intended for use by both researchers and graduate students of mathematics, physics, and engineering who have a basic background in functional analysis and operator theory. The book provides several challenging problems and detailed arguments for the majority of the results. Each chapter ends with some notes about historical views or further extensions of the topics. It contains a bibliography of about 180 items, so it can be used as a reference book including many classical and modern numerical radius inequalities.

Spectra and Pseudospectra

Spectra and Pseudospectra
Author: Lloyd N. Trefethen
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 634
Release: 2005-08-07
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9780691119465

Pure and applied mathematicians, physicists, scientists, and engineers use matrices and operators and their eigenvalues in quantum mechanics, fluid mechanics, structural analysis, acoustics, ecology, numerical analysis, and many other areas. However, in some applications the usual analysis based on eigenvalues fails. For example, eigenvalues are often ineffective for analyzing dynamical systems such as fluid flow, Markov chains, ecological models, and matrix iterations. That's where this book comes in. This is the authoritative work on nonnormal matrices and operators, written by the authorities who made them famous. Each of the sixty sections is written as a self-contained essay. Each document is a lavishly illustrated introductory survey of its topic, complete with beautiful numerical experiments and all the right references. The breadth of included topics and the numerous applications that provide links between fields will make this an essential reference in mathematics and related sciences.

Lectures on Mechanics

Lectures on Mechanics
Author: Jerrold E. Marsden
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 1992-04-30
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9780521428446

Based on the 1991 LMS Invited Lectures given by Professor Marsden, this book discusses and applies symmetry methods to such areas as bifurcations and chaos in mechanical systems.

Lectures on Block Theory

Lectures on Block Theory
Author: Burkhard Külshammer
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 120
Release: 1991-04-04
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9780521405652

Block theory is a part of the theory of modular representation of finite groups and deals with the algebraic structure of blocks. In this volume Burkhard Külshammer starts with the classical structure theory of finite dimensional algebras, and leads up to Puigs main result on the structure of the so called nilpotent blocks, which he discusses in the final chapter. All the proofs in the text are given clearly and in full detail, and suggestions for further reading are also included. For researchers and graduate students interested in group theory or representation theory, this book will form an excellent self contained introduction to the theory of blocks.