A first course on complex functions

by G. J. O. Jameson

Paper Book, 1970

Status

Available

Call number

515/.9

Library's review

Indeholder "Preface", "Terminology and notation", "Metric spaces", "1. Basic theory", " 1.1. The complex number field", " 1.2. Sequences and series", " 1.3. Line segments and convexity", " 1.4. Complex functions of a real variable", " 1.5. Differentiation", " 1.6. The exponential and trigonometric
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functions", " 1.7. Integration", "2. The theory of differentiable functions", " 2.1. Cauchy's integral theorem and formula", " 2.2. The Taylor series and its applications", " 2.3. Entire functions and polynomials", " 2.4. The modulus of a differentiable function", " 2.5. Singularities; Laurent series", " 2.6. The residue theorem", " 2.7. Integration of f'/f and the local mapping theorem", "3. Further topics", " 3.1. The evaluation of real integrals", " 3.2. The summation of series", " 3.3. Partial fractions", " 3.4. Winding numbers", "Glossary of symbols", "Bibliography", "Index".

Standardlærebog i kompleks funktionsteori.
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Publication

London, Chapman & Hall, 1970. xii, 148 p. illus. 22 cm.

Description

This book contains a rigorous coverage of those topics (and only those topics) that, in the author's judgement, are suitable for inclusion in a first course on Complex Functions. Roughly speaking, these can be summarized as being the things that can be done with Cauchy's integral formula and the residue theorem. On the theoretical side, this includes the basic core of the theory of differentiable complex functions, a theory which is unsurpassed in Mathematics for its cohesion, elegance and wealth of surprises. On the practical side, it includes the computational applications of the residue theorem. Some prominence is given to the latter, because for the more sceptical student they provide the justification for inventing the complex numbers. Analytic continuation and Riemann surfaces form an essentially different chapter of Complex Analysis. A proper treatment is far too sophisticated for a first course, and they are therefore excluded. The aim has been to produce the simplest possible rigorous treatment of the topics discussed. For the programme outlined above, it is quite sufficient to prove Cauchy'S integral theorem for paths in star-shaped open sets, so this is done. No form of the Jordan curve theorem is used anywhere in the book.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

xii, 148 p.; 21.4 cm

ISBN

0412097109 / 9780412097102

Local notes

Omslag: Ikke angivet
Omslaget viser blot forfatter og titel som tekst
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi
Opgave 2 i øvelse 3.2 giver for z=1/2 en sjov formel for pi
# pi = 2 + sum(1..infinity) ((-1)^n * ((1/2)^2 - n^2))
$sum = 2;
for $i (1..1000) {
$sum += (1 - 2*($i%2)) / (0.25 - $i*$i);
print "$i: $sumn";
}
# 1000: 3.14159215408967

Pages

xii; 148

Library's rating

Rating

(1 rating; 3)

DDC/MDS

515/.9
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