Offers brief treatises on several mathematical areas and a historical summary of American contributions to mathematics during the Society's first fifty years.
Derived from a special session on Low Dimensional Topology organized and conducted by Dr Lomonaco at the American Mathematical Society meeting held in San Francisco, California, January 7-11, 1981.
Following the early tradition of the American Mathematical Society, the sixth colloquium of the Society was held as part of the summer meeting that took place at Princeton University. Two sets of lectures were presented: Fundamental Existence Theorems, by G. A. Bliss, and Geometric Aspects of Dynamics, by Edward Kasner. The goal of Bliss's Colloquium Lectures is an overview of contemporary existence theorems for solutions to ordinary or partial differential equations. The first part of the book, however, covers algebraic and analytic aspects of implicit functions. These become the primary tools for the existence theorems, as Bliss builds from the theories established by Cauchy and Picard. There are also applications to the calculus of variations. Kasner's lectures were concerned with the differential geometry of dynamics, especially kinetics. At the time of the colloquium, it was more common in kinematics to consider geometry of trajectories only in the absence of an external force. The lectures begin with a discussion of the possible trajectories in an arbitrary force field. Kasner then specializes to the study of conservative forces, including wave propagation and some curious optical phenomena. The discussion of constrained motions leads to the brachistochrone and tautochrone problems. Kasner concludes by looking at more complicated motions, such as trajectories in a resisting medium.
Contains the proceedings of the AMS Summer Research Conference on Axiomatic Set Theory, held in Boulder, Colorado, June 19-25, 1983. This work covers the various areas of set theory, including constructibility, forcing, combinatorics and descriptive set theory.
This symposium, on Representation Theory of Finite Groups and Related Topics, was held in conjunction with a sectional meeting of the American Mathematical Society, and in honor of professor Richard Brauer. Dr. Brauer's fundamental work in representation theory is at the heart of many further developments in the topic. These proceedings contain the articles of participants, based on their symposium presentations, and indicate the scope of current research in representation theory.
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This volume contains the proceedings of an AMS Special Session on Geometry, Physics, and Nonlinear PDEs, The conference brought together specialists in Monge-Ampere equations, prescribed curvature problems, mean curvature, harmonic maps, evolution with curvature-dependent speed, isospectral manifolds, and general relativity. An excellent overview of the frontiers of research in these areas.
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