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Introduction to analysis in one variable

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: ENG Series: Pure and Applied Undergraduate Texts ; Vol. 47Publication details: Rhode Island : American Mathematical Society, c2020.; Hyderabad : University Press (India) Pvt. Ltd., 2025.Edition: 1st Indian edDescription: xii, 247 p. : ill. ; 24cmISBN:
  • 9781470456689
  • 9789349750623 (pbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 515.83 TAY 23rd
Summary: This is a text for students who have had a three-course calculus sequence and who are ready to explore the logical structure of analysis as the backbone of calculus. It begins with a development of the real numbers, building this system from more basic objects (natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, Cauchy sequences), and it produces basic algebraic and metric properties of the real number line as propositions, rather than axioms. The text also makes use of the complex numbers and incorporates this into the development of differential and integral calculus. For example, it develops the theory of the exponential function for both real and complex arguments, and it makes a geometrical study of the curve (exp it), for real t, leading to a self-contained development of the trigonometric functions and to a derivation of the Euler identity that is very different from what one typically sees. Further topics include metric spaces, the Stone–Weierstrass theorem, and Fourier series. Readership: Undergraduates interested in analysis in one variable.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Barcode
Books Books Vigyanpuri Campus 515.83 TAY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Acquired through NBHM Library Grant 2025-2026. M00098

Includes illustrations, appendices, bibliographic references, and subject index.

This is a text for students who have had a three-course calculus sequence and who are ready to explore the logical structure of analysis as the backbone of calculus. It begins with a development of the real numbers, building this system from more basic objects (natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, Cauchy sequences), and it produces basic algebraic and metric properties of the real number line as propositions, rather than axioms. The text also makes use of the complex numbers and incorporates this into the development of differential and integral calculus. For example, it develops the theory of the exponential function for both real and complex arguments, and it makes a geometrical study of the curve (exp it), for real t, leading to a self-contained development of the trigonometric functions and to a derivation of the Euler identity that is very different from what one typically sees. Further topics include metric spaces, the Stone–Weierstrass theorem, and Fourier series.

Readership: Undergraduates interested in analysis in one variable.

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