Surveys in Combinatorics 2003


Book Description

The British Combinatorial Conference is held every two years and is a key event for mathematicians worldwide working in combinatorics. In June 2003 the conference was held at the University of Wales, Bangor. The papers contained here are surveys contributed by the invited speakers and are of the high quality that befits the event. There is also a tribute to Bill Tutte who had a long-standing association with the BCC. The papers cover topics currently attracting significant research interest as well as some less traditional areas such as the combinatorics of protecting digital content. They will form an excellent resource for established researchers as well as graduate students who will find much here to inspire future work.




Surveys in Combinatorics 2007


Book Description

Survey articles based on the invited lectures given at the Twenty-first British Combinatorial Conference, first published in 2007.




Surveys in Combinatorics 2005


Book Description

This volume provides an up-to-date overview of current research across combinatorics,.




Surveys in Combinatorics 2024


Book Description

This volume contains surveys of current research directions in combinatorics written by leading researchers in their fields.







Geometric and Cohomological Methods in Group Theory


Book Description

An extended tour through a selection of the most important trends in modern geometric group theory.







The Bloch–Kato Conjecture for the Riemann Zeta Function


Book Description

There are still many arithmetic mysteries surrounding the values of the Riemann zeta function at the odd positive integers greater than one. For example, the matter of their irrationality, let alone transcendence, remains largely unknown. However, by extending ideas of Garland, Borel proved that these values are related to the higher K-theory of the ring of integers. Shortly afterwards, Bloch and Kato proposed a Tamagawa number-type conjecture for these values, and showed that it would follow from a result in motivic cohomology which was unknown at the time. This vital result from motivic cohomology was subsequently proven by Huber, Kings, and Wildeshaus. Bringing together key results from K-theory, motivic cohomology, and Iwasawa theory, this book is the first to give a complete proof, accessible to graduate students, of the Bloch–Kato conjecture for odd positive integers. It includes a new account of the results from motivic cohomology by Huber and Kings.




Complexity Science


Book Description

This book presents introductions to the essential mathematical aspects of complexity science, suitable for advanced undergraduate/masters-level students and researchers.




Words


Book Description

Explores fundamental questions about the behaviour of word-values in groups.