Elements of linear and multilinear algebra [electronic resource] / by John M. Erdman.
By: Erdman, John M.
Material type: BookPublisher: Singapore ; New Jersey : World Scientific, 2021Description: 1 online resource (5, 219 p.).ISBN: 9789811222733.Subject(s): Algebras, Linear | Multilinear algebraGenre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 512/.5 Online resources: Access to full text is restricted to subscribers.Mode of access: World Wide Web.
System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Vector spaces -- Linear transformations -- The language of categories -- The spectral theorem for vector spaces -- The spectral theorem for inner product spaces -- A brief review of differential calculus -- Multilinear maps and determinants -- Tensor algebras -- Differential manifolds -- Differential forms on manifolds -- Homology and cohomology -- Stokes' theorem -- Geometric algebra -- Clifford algebras.
"This set of notes is an activity-oriented introduction to linear and multilinear algebra. The great majority of the most elementary results in these subjects are straightforward and can be verified by the thoughtful student. Indeed, that is the main point of these notes - to convince the beginner that the subject is accessible. In the material that follows there are numerous indicators that suggest activity on the part of the reader: words such as "proposition", "example", "theorem", "exercise", and "corollary", if not followed by a proof (and proofs here are very rare) or a reference to a proof, are invitations to verify the assertions made. These notes are intended to accompany an (academic) year-long course at the advanced undergraduate or beginning graduate level. (With judicious pruning most of the material can be covered in a two-term sequence.) The text is also suitable for a lecture-style class, the instructor proving some of the results while leaving others as exercises for the students. This book has tried to keep the facts about vector spaces and those about inner product spaces separate. Many beginning linear algebra texts conflate the material on these two vastly different subjects"--Publisher's website.
There are no comments for this item.