Ergodic Theory / Karl Petersen.
Material type: TextSeries: Cambridge studies in advanced mathematics ; 2Publication details: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1989.Description: xi, 329 p. : ill. ; 23 cmISBN:- 0521236320 (pbk.)
- 0521389976 (hard)
- QA313 .P47 1989
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Library First Floor | QA313 .P47 1989 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 8482 | |
Books | Library First Floor | QA313 .P47 1989 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | 9628 |
Browsing Library shelves, Shelving location: First Floor Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||||
QA308 .B68 2004 Elements of Mathematics : | QA308 .B68 2004 Elements of Mathematics | QA309 .R839 2006 AP Calculus AB & BC : Expert Review , Strategies, and Practice from the Teachers Who Know the Test / | QA313 .P47 1989 Ergodic Theory / | QA313 .P47 1989 Ergodic Theory / | QA320 .C478 1996 Inverse spectra / | QA320 .K74 1978 Introductory functional analysis with applications / |
Includes bibliographical referneces (p. [302]-321) and index.
Preface; 1. Introduction and preliminaries; 2. The fundamentals of ergodic theory; 3. More about almost everywhere convergence; 4. More about recurrence; 5. Entropy; 6. More about entropy; References; Index.
The study of dynamical systems forms a vast and rapidly developing field even when one considers only activity whose methods derive mainly from measure theory and functional analysis. Karl Petersen has written a book which presents the fundamentals of the ergodic theory of point transformations and then several advanced topics which are currently undergoing intense research. By selecting one or more of these topics to focus on, the reader can quickly approach the specialized literature and indeed the frontier of the area of interest. Each of the four basic aspects of ergodic theory - examples, convergence theorems, recurrence properties, and entropy - receives first a basic and then a more advanced, particularized treatment. At the introductory level, the book provides clear and complete discussions of the standard examples, the mean and pointwise ergodic theorems, recurrence, ergodicity, weak mixing, strong mixing, and the fundamentals of entropy. Among the advanced topics are a thorough treatment of maximal functions and their usefulness in ergodic theory, analysis, and probability, an introduction to almost-periodic functions and topological dynamics, a proof of the Jewett-Krieger Theorem, an introduction to multiple recurrence and the Szemeredi-Furstenberg Theorem, and the Keane-Smorodinsky proof of Ornstein's Isomorphism Theorem for Bernoulli shifts. The author's easily-readable style combined with the profusion of exercises and references, summaries, historical remarks, and heuristic discussions make this book useful either as a text for graduate students or self-study, or as a reference work for the initiated.
There are no comments on this title.