With this second volume, we enter the intriguing
world of complex analysis. From the first theorems on,
the elegance and sweep of the results is evident. The
starting point is the simple idea of extending a
function initially given for real values of the argument
to one that is defined when the argument is complex.
From there, one proceeds to the main properties of
holomorphic functions, whose proofs are generally short
and quite illuminating: the Cauchy theorems, residues,
analytic continuation, the argument principle. With this
background, the reader is ready to learn a wealth of
additional material connecting the subject with other
areas of mathematics: the Fourier transform treated by
contour integration, the zeta function and the prime
number theorem, and an introduction to elliptic
functions culminating in their application to
combinatorics and number theory. Thoroughly developing a
subject with many ramifications, while striking a
careful balance between conceptual insights and the
technical underpinnings of rigorous analysis, ''Complex
Analysis'' will be welcomed by students of mathematics,
physics, engineering and other sciences.''The Princeton
Lectures in Analysis'' represents a sustained effort to
introduce the core areas of mathematical analysis while
also illustrating the organic unity between them.
Numerous examples and applications throughout its four
planned volumes, of which ''Complex Analysis'' is the
second, highlight the far-reaching consequences of
certain ideas in analysis to other fields of mathematics
and a variety of sciences. Stein and Shakarchi move from
an introduction addressing ''Fourier'' series and
integrals to in-depth considerations of complex
analysis; measure and integration theory, and Hilbert
spaces; and, finally, further topics such as functional
analysis, distributions and elements of probability
theory. |
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