LMSST: 24 Lectures on Elliptic Curves


Book Description

A self-contained introductory text for beginning graduate students that is contemporary in approach without ignoring historical matters.







Permutation Groups


Book Description

This book summarizes recent developments in the study of permutation groups for beginning graduate students.




Steps in Commutative Algebra


Book Description

Introductory account of commutative algebra, aimed at students with a background in basic algebra.




Complex Algebraic Surfaces


Book Description

Developed over more than a century, and still an active area of research today, the classification of algebraic surfaces is an intricate and fascinating branch of mathematics. In this book Professor BeauviIle gives a lucid and concise account of the subject, following the strategy of F. Enriques, but expressed simply in the language of modern topology and sheaf theory, so as to be accessible to any budding geometer. This volume is self contained and the exercises succeed both in giving the flavour of the extraordinary wealth of examples in the classical subject, and in equipping the reader with most of the techniques needed for research.




LMSST


Book Description

A self-contained introductory text for beginning graduate students that is contemporary in approach without ignoring historical matters.




Introductory Lectures on Rings and Modules


Book Description

A first-year graduate text or reference for advanced undergraduates on noncommutative aspects of rings and modules.




Spacetime and Singularities


Book Description

An elementary introduction to the geometrical methods and notions used in special and general relativity. Emphasizes the ideas concerned with structure of space-time that play a role in Penrose-Hawking singularity theorems.




Local Fields


Book Description

This book provides a fairly elementary and self-contained introduction to local fields.




Aspects of Quantum Field Theory in Curved Spacetime


Book Description

The theory of quantum fields on curved spacetimes has attracted great attention since the discovery, by Stephen Hawking, of black-hole evaporation. It remains an important subject for the understanding of such contemporary topics as inflationary cosmology, quantum gravity and superstring theory. This book provides, for mathematicians, an introduction to this field of physics in a language and from a viewpoint which such a reader should find congenial. Physicists should also gain from reading this book a sound grasp of various aspects of the theory, some of which have not been particularly emphasised in the existing review literature. The topics covered include normal-mode expansions for a general elliptic operator, Fock space, the Casimir effect, the 'Klein' paradox, particle definition and particle creation in expanding universes, asymptotic expansion of Green's functions and heat kernels, and renormalisation of the stress tensor. The style is pedagogic rather than formal; some knowledge of general relativity and differential geometry is assumed, but the author does supply background material on functional analysis and quantum field theory as required. The book arose from a course taught to graduate students and could be used for self-study or for advanced courses in relativity and quantum field theory.