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E-raamat: Introduction To Analysis With Complex Numbers

  • Formaat: 456 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Feb-2021
  • Kirjastus: World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789811225871
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  • Formaat: 456 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Feb-2021
  • Kirjastus: World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789811225871
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"This is a self-contained book that covers the standard topics in introductory analysis and that in addition, constructs the natural, rational, real and complex numbers, also handles complex-valued functions, sequences, and series. The book teaches how to write proofs. Fundamental proof-writing logic is covered in Chapter 1 and is repeated and enhanced in two appendices. Many examples of proofs appear with words in a different font for what should be going on in the proof writer's head. The book containsmany examples and exercises to solidify the understanding. The material is presented rigorously with proofs and with many worked-out examples. Exercises are varied, many involve proofs, and some provide additional learning materials"--

This is a self-contained book that covers the standard topics in introductory analysis and that in addition constructs the natural, rational, real and complex numbers, and also handles complex-valued functions, sequences, and series. The book teaches how to write proofs. Fundamental proof-writing logic is covered in Chapter 1 and is repeated and enhanced in two appendices. Many examples of proofs appear with words in a different font for what should be going on in the proof writer's head. The book contains many examples and exercises to solidify the understanding. The material is presented rigorously with proofs and with many worked-out examples. Exercises are varied, many involve proofs, and some provide additional learning materials.

Preface ix
The briefest overview, motivation, notation xi
Chapter 1 How we will do mathematics
1(44)
Section 1.1 Statements and proof methods
1(15)
Section 1.2 Statements with quantifiers
16(4)
Section 1.3 More proof methods
20(4)
Section 1.4 Logical negation
24(3)
Section 1.5 Summation
27(3)
Section 1.6 Proofs by (mathematical) induction
30(10)
Section 1.7 Pascal's triangle
40(5)
Chapter 2 Concepts with which we will do mathematics
45(62)
Section 2.1 Sets
45(11)
Section 2.2 Cartesian product
56(2)
Section 2.3 Relations, equivalence relations
58(7)
Section 2.4 Functions
65(13)
Section 2.5 Binary operations
78(7)
Section 2.6 Fields
85(5)
Section 2.7 Order on sets, ordered fields
90(7)
Section 2.8 What are the integers and the rational numbers?
97(3)
Section 2.9 Increasing and decreasing functions
100(3)
Section 2.10 Absolute values
103(4)
Chapter 3 Construction of the number systems
107(70)
Section 3.1 Inductive sets, a construction of natural numbers
107(6)
Section 3.2 Arithmetic on No
113(4)
Section 3.3 Order on N0
117(3)
Section 3.4 Cancellation in No
120(1)
Section 3.5 Construction of Z, arithmetic, and order on Z
121(7)
Section 3.6 Construction of the ordered field Q
128(6)
Section 3.7 Construction of the field R of real numbers
134(10)
Section 3.8 Order on R, the Least upper bound theorem
144(6)
Section 3.9 Complex numbers
150(4)
Section 3.10 Functions related to complex numbers
154(2)
Section 3.11 Absolute value in C
156(4)
Section 3.12 Polar coordinates
160(6)
Section 3.13 Topology on the fields of real and complex numbers
166(5)
Section 3.14 The Heine-Borel theorem
171(6)
Chapter 4 Limits of functions
177(38)
Section 4.1 Limit of a function
177(13)
Section 4.2 When a number is not a limit
190(4)
Section 4.3 More on the definition of a limit
194(4)
Section 4.4 Limit theorems
198(9)
Section 4.5 Infinite limits (for real-valued functions)
207(4)
Section 4.6 Limits at infinity
211(4)
Chapter 5 Continuity
215(24)
Section 5.1 Continuous functions
215(6)
Section 5.2 Topology and the Extreme value theorem
221(4)
Section 5.3 Intermediate value theorem
225(5)
Section 5.4 Radical functions
230(5)
Section 5.5 Uniform continuity
235(4)
Chapter 6 Differentiation
239(30)
Section 6.1 Definition of derivatives
239(5)
Section 6.2 Basic properties of derivatives
244(9)
Section 6.3 The Mean value theorem
253(6)
Section 6.4 L'Hopital's rule
259(4)
Section 6.5 Higher-order derivatives, Taylor polynomials
263(6)
Chapter 7 Integration
269(44)
Section 7.1 Approximating areas
269(12)
Section 7.2 Computing integrals from upper and lower sums
281(4)
Section 7.3 What functions are integrable?
285(5)
Section 7.4 The Fundamental theorem of calculus
290(8)
Section 7.5 Integration of complex-valued functions
298(1)
Section 7.6 Natural logarithm and the exponential functions
299(6)
Section 7.7 Applications of integration
305(8)
Chapter 8 Sequences
313(48)
Section 8.1 Introduction to sequences
313(6)
Section 8.2 Convergence of infinite sequences
319(9)
Section 8.3 Divergence of infinite sequences and infinite limits
328(4)
Section 8.4 Convergence theorems via epsilon-N proofs
332(7)
Section 8.5 Convergence theorems via functions
339(4)
Section 8.6 Bounded sequences, monotone sequences, ratio test
343(4)
Section 8.7 Cauchy sequences, completeness of R, C
347(4)
Section 8.8 Subsequences
351(4)
Section 8.9 Liminf, limsup for real-valued sequences
355(6)
Chapter 9 Infinite series and power series
361(36)
Section 9.1 Infinite series
361(5)
Section 9.2 Convergence and divergence theorems for series
366(7)
Section 9.3 Power series
373(6)
Section 9.4 Differentiation of power series
379(5)
Section 9.5 Numerical evaluations of some series
384(2)
Section 9.6 Some technical aspects of power series
386(5)
Section 9.7 Taylor series
391(6)
Chapter 10 Exponential and trigonometric functions
397(26)
Section 10.1 The exponential function
397(3)
Section 10.2 The exponential function, continued
400(8)
Section 10.3 Trigonometry
408(6)
Section 10.4 Examples of L'Hopital's rule
414(1)
Section 10.5 Trigonometry for the computation of some series
415(8)
Appendix A Advice on writing mathematics 423(6)
Appendix B What one should never forget 429(4)
Index 433