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Advances in Analysis and Geometry: New Developments Using Clifford Algebras

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Advances in Analysis and Geometry: New Developments Using Clifford Algebras

Advances in Analysis and Geometry: New Developments Using Clifford Algebras by Tao Qian, Thomas Hempfling, Alan McIntosh, Frank Sommen
English | PDF | 2004 | 308 Pages | ISBN : 3764366613 | 49 MB

On the 16th of October 1843, Sir William R. Hamilton made the discovery of the quaternion algebra H = qo + qli + q2j + q3k whereby the product is determined by the defining relations ·2 ·2 1 Z =] = - , ij = -ji = k. In fact he was inspired by the beautiful geometric model of the complex numbers in which rotations are represented by simple multiplications z ––t az. His goal was to obtain an algebra structure for three dimensional visual space with in particular the possibility of representing all spatial rotations by algebra multiplications and since 1835 he started looking for generalized complex numbers (hypercomplex numbers) of the form a + bi + cj. It hence took him a long time to accept that a fourth dimension was necessary and that commutativity couldn't be kept and he wondered about a possible real life meaning of this fourth dimension which he identified with the scalar part qo as opposed to the vector part ql i + q2j + q3k which represents a point in space.

Reciprocity Laws: From Euler to Eisenstein

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Reciprocity Laws: From Euler to Eisenstein

Reciprocity Laws: From Euler to Eisenstein by Franz Lemmermeyer
English | PDF | 2000 | 503 Pages | ISBN : 3540669574 | 46.6 MB

This book is about the development of reciprocity laws, starting from conjectures of Euler and discussing the contributions of Legendre, Gauss, Dirichlet, Jacobi, and Eisenstein. Readers knowledgeable in basic algebraic number theory and Galois theory will find detailed discussions of the reciprocity laws for quadratic, cubic, quartic, sextic and octic residues, rational reciprocity laws, and Eisensteins reciprocity law. An extensive bibliography will particularly appeal to readers interested in the history of reciprocity laws or in the current research in this area.