Complex Analysis von Jane P. Gilman | In the Spirit of Lipman Bers | ISBN 9780387747149

Complex Analysis

In the Spirit of Lipman Bers

von Jane P. Gilman, Irwin Kra und Rubí E. Rodríguez
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinJane P. Gilman
Autor / AutorinIrwin Kra
Autor / AutorinRubí E. Rodríguez
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Buchcover Complex Analysis | Jane P. Gilman | EAN 9780387747149 | ISBN 0-387-74714-1 | ISBN 978-0-387-74714-9
From the reviews:„This is a fairly conventional text for a first course in complex analysis. It is an interesting mix of the concrete and the abstract, and of the formulaic and the geometric. It has good exercises … . It is nominally a graduate text (it is in Springer’s series of Graduate Texts in Mathematics) … . The book covers all the usual topics for a first course and includes a lot of advanced topics … .“ (Allen Stenger, MathDL, February, 2008)„This book is based on the original courses of Complex Analysis that was delivered by the well-known American specialist and lecturer in Analysis, Professor Lipman Bers. … the book is written in a clear and easily readable manner. … this book is useful for all specialists and lecturers in Complex Analysis … and also all specialists who deal with applications of Complex Analysis. I also recommend this book to beginners who want to study Complex Analysis … .“ (Peter Zabreiko, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1139 (17), 2008)“An introduction to complex analysis based on original lectures by Lipman Bers … . the whole text is clearly suitable as a first course in complex analysis. … In addition, it contains many exercises and a brief guide to the literature.” (G. Teschl, Monatshefte für Mathematik, Vol. 156 (4), April, 2009)

Complex Analysis

In the Spirit of Lipman Bers

von Jane P. Gilman, Irwin Kra und Rubí E. Rodríguez
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinJane P. Gilman
Autor / AutorinIrwin Kra
Autor / AutorinRubí E. Rodríguez

The authors’ aim here is to present a precise and concise treatment of those parts of complex analysis that should be familiar to every research mathematician. They follow a path in the tradition of Ahlfors and Bers by dedicating the book to a very precise goal: the statement and proof of the Fundamental Theorem for functions of one complex variable. They discuss the many equivalent ways of understanding the concept of analyticity, and offer a leisure exploration of interesting consequences and applications. Readers should have had undergraduate courses in advanced calculus, linear algebra, and some abstract algebra. No background in complex analysis is required.