Metric Spaces: A Companion to Analysis

دانلود کتاب Metric Spaces: A Companion to Analysis

56000 تومان موجود

کتاب فضاهای متریک: همراهی برای تجزیه و تحلیل نسخه زبان اصلی

دانلود کتاب فضاهای متریک: همراهی برای تجزیه و تحلیل بعد از پرداخت مقدور خواهد بود
توضیحات کتاب در بخش جزئیات آمده است و می توانید موارد را مشاهده فرمایید


این کتاب نسخه اصلی می باشد و به زبان فارسی نیست.


امتیاز شما به این کتاب (حداقل 1 و حداکثر 5):

امتیاز کاربران به این کتاب:        تعداد رای دهنده ها: 3


توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Metric Spaces: A Companion to Analysis

نام کتاب : Metric Spaces: A Companion to Analysis
ویرایش : 1
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : فضاهای متریک: همراهی برای تجزیه و تحلیل
سری : Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series
نویسندگان :
ناشر : Springer
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 258
ISBN (شابک) : 3030949451 , 9783030949457
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 3 مگابایت



بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.


فهرست مطالب :


Preface
Contents
Preliminaries on Sets
Basic Relations
Basic Operations
Writing Predicates
Set-Building Rules
Relations and Functions
Cardinals
Other Notions
1 Metric Spaces
1.1 Metrics
1.1.1 Rationale for Metrics
1.1.2 Defining Metric Space
1.1.3 Exercises
1.2 Examples of Metric Spaces
1.2.1 Normed Spaces
1.2.2 Subspaces
1.2.3 Examples; Not Subspaces of Normed Spaces
1.2.4 Pseudometrics
1.2.5 Cauchy-Schwarz, Hölder, Minkowski
1.2.6 Exercises
1.3 Cantor\'s Middle Thirds Set
1.3.1 Exercises
1.4 The Normed Spaces of Functional Analysis
1.4.1 Sequence Spaces
1.4.2 Function Spaces
1.4.3 Spaces of Continuous Functions
1.4.4 Spaces of Integrable Functions
1.4.5 Hölder\'s and Minkowski\'s Inequalities for Integrals
1.4.6 Exercises
2 Basic Theory of Metric Spaces
2.1 Balls in a Metric Space
2.1.1 Limit of a Convergent Sequence
2.1.2 Uniqueness of the Limit
2.1.3 Neighbourhoods
2.1.4 Bounded Sets
2.1.5 Completeness; a Key Concept
2.1.6 Exercises
2.2 Open Sets, and Closed
2.2.1 Open Sets
2.2.2 Union and Intersection of Open Sets
2.2.3 Closed Sets
2.2.4 Union and Intersection of Closed Sets
2.2.5 Characterisation of Open and Closed Sets by Sequences
2.2.6 Interior, Closure and Boundary
2.2.7 Limit Points of Sets
2.2.8 Characterisation of Closure by Limit Points
2.2.9 Subspaces
2.2.10 Open and Closed Sets in a Subspace
2.2.11 Exercises
2.3 Continuous Mappings
2.3.1 Defining Continuity
2.3.2 New Views of Continuity
2.3.3 Limits of Functions
2.3.4 Characterising Continuity by Sequences
2.3.5 Lipschitz Mappings
2.3.6 Examples of Continuous Functions
2.3.7 Exercises
2.4 Continuity of Linear Mappings
2.4.1 Continuity Criterion
2.4.2 Operator Norms
2.4.3 Exercises
2.5 Homeomorphisms and Topological Properties
2.5.1 Equivalent Metrics
2.5.2 Exercises
2.6 Topologies and σ-Algebras
2.6.1 Order Topologies
2.6.2 Exercises
2.6.3 Pointers to Further Study
2.7 () Mazur-Ulam
2.7.1 Exercises
3 Completeness of the Classical Spaces
3.1 Coordinate Spaces and Normed Sequence Spaces
3.1.1 Completeness of Rn
3.1.2 Completeness of p
3.1.3 Exercises
3.2 Product Spaces
3.2.1 Finitely Many Factors
3.2.2 Infinitely Many Factors
3.2.3 The Space 2N+ and the Cantor Set
3.2.4 Subspaces of Complete Spaces
3.2.5 Exercises
3.3 Spaces of Continuous Functions
3.3.1 Uniform Convergence
3.3.2 Series in Normed Spaces
3.3.3 The Weierstrass M-Test
3.3.4 The Spaces C(R) and Cp(R)
3.3.5 Exercises
3.4 () Rearrangements
3.4.1 Vector Series
3.4.2 Exercises
3.4.3 Pointers to Further Study
3.5 () Invertible Operators
3.5.1 Fredholm Integral Equation
3.5.2 Exercises
3.5.3 Pointers to Further Study
3.6 () Tietze
3.6.1 Formulas for an Extension
3.6.2 Exercises
3.6.3 Pointers to Further Study
4 Compact Spaces
4.1 Sequentially Compact Spaces
4.1.1 Continuous Functions on Sequentially Compact Spaces
4.1.2 Bolzano-Weierstrass in Rn
4.1.3 Sequentially Compact Sets in Rn
4.1.4 Sequentially Compact Sets in Other Spaces
4.1.5 The Space C(M)
4.1.6 Exercises
4.2 The Correct Definition of Compactness
4.2.1 Thoughts About the Definition
4.2.2 Compact Spaces and Compact Sets
4.2.3 Continuous Functions on Compact Spaces
4.2.4 Uniform Continuity
4.2.5 Exercises
4.3 Equivalence of Compactness and Sequential Compactness
4.3.1 Relative Compactness
4.3.2 Local Compactness
4.3.3 Exercises
4.4 Finite Dimensional Normed Vector Spaces
4.4.1 Exercises
4.5 () Ascoli
4.5.1 Peano\'s Existence Theorem
4.5.2 Exercises
4.5.3 Pointers to Further Study
5 Separable Spaces
5.1 Dense Subsets of a Metric Space
5.1.1 Defining a Vector-Valued Integral
5.1.2 Exercises
5.2 Separability
5.2.1 Second Countability
5.2.2 Exercises
5.3 () Weierstrass
5.3.1 Exercises
5.3.2 Pointers to Further Study
5.4 () Stone-Weierstrass
5.4.1 Exercises
5.4.2 Pointers to Further Study
6 Properties of Complete Spaces
6.1 Cantor\'s Nested Intersection Theorem
Notes About Cantor\'s Theorem
6.1.1 Categories
Thoughts About the Proof
6.1.2 Exercises
6.2 () Genericity
6.2.1 Exercises
6.2.2 Pointers to Further Study
6.3 () Nowhere Differentiability
6.3.1 Exercises
6.3.2 Pointers to Further Study
6.4 Fixed Points
6.4.1 Exercises
6.5 () Picard
6.5.1 Exercises
6.6 () Zeros
6.6.1 Exercises
6.6.2 Pointers to Further Study
6.7 Completion of a Metric Space
6.7.1 Other Ways to Complete a Metric Space
6.7.2 Exercises
7 Connected Spaces
7.1 Connectedness
7.1.1 Connected Sets
7.1.2 Rules for Connected Sets
7.1.3 Connected Subsets of R
7.1.4 Exercises
7.2 Continuous Mappings and Connectedness
7.2.1 Continuous Curves
7.2.2 Arcwise Connectedness
7.2.3 Exiting a Set
7.2.4 Exercises
7.3 Connected Components
7.3.1 Examples of Connected Components
7.3.2 Arcwise Connected Components
7.3.3 Exercises
7.4 () Peano
7.4.1 Exercises
7.4.2 Pointers to Further Study
Afterword
Index




پست ها تصادفی