![]() "This book (barely over a hundred pages of text) is very short, even by the standards of this series, but nevertheless addresses most or all of the standard topics that one would expect to see in an introductory graduate-level semester in functional analysis, and perhaps even one or two things that might not get mentioned. More specifically, the first chapter starts with normed linear spaces, then defines Banach spaces and discusses the “big three” results typically associated with them (Uniform Boundedness, Open Mapping, Hahn-Banach). This is followed by chapters on the dual space, Hilbert space, the algebra of bounded linear operators on a Banach space (including a fairly lengthy section on compact operators), and Banach algebras. The author then generalizes things by discussing (chapter 6) arbitrary topological vector spaces. The four remaining chapters of the text discuss, in order, distributions, spectral theory (for bounded, particularly bounded normal, operators on a Hilbert space; some background in measure theory is needed for this chapter), convexity (including the Krein-Milman theorem), and fixed point theorems (the contraction mapping principle and the Schauder theorem)." Read the full review here. |
Showing posts with label Functional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Functional. Show all posts
Friday, August 16, 2013
Mark Hunacek Reviews A Guide to Functional Analysis
Friday, April 12, 2013
Now Available in the MAA Store
A Guide to Functional Analysis
is now available in the MAA Store!
Steven G. Krantz describes his new book below.
"Everyone knows that functional analysis is one of the most powerful tools
of twentieth-century mathematics. The idea of studying entire spaces
of functions, rather than just one function at a time, is both deep and original.
Yet it is difficult to get a glimpse of what this subject is really about, or
of how it works.
The Guide to Functional Analysis takes the neophyte reader and shows
him/her the basic concepts and rubric of this time-tested discipline. All the
major ideas are illustrated with concrete examples and applications to other
parts of mathematics. There are even some illustrations.
This is a user-friendly, hands-on introduction to an otherwise austere
and forbidding part of the mathematical lore. It will be helpful to students
beginning the long journey down the path to mastery of analysis and
also enlightening for any mathematician wanting to bone up on
linear operators and their uses. This book is meant to be a guide,
and we hope that it guides you to a pleasurable reading experience."
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Friday, March 29, 2013
New Book: A Guide to Functional Analysis
by Steven G. Krantz |
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