000 01311 a2200157 4500
020 _a9780486470047
082 _a515.93 WEY
100 _a Weyl, Hermann
245 _aThe Concept of a Riemann Surface/
_cHermann Weyl.
250 _a3rd ed.
260 _bDover Publications,
_aMassachusetts:
_cc1955.
300 _ax, 191p.
520 _aThis classic on the general history of functions was written by one of the twentieth century's best-known mathematicians. Hermann Weyl, who worked with Einstein at Princeton, combined function theory and geometry in this high-level landmark work, forming a new branch of mathematics and the basis of the modern approach to analysis, geometry, and topology. The author intended this book not only to develop the basic ideas of Riemann's theory of algebraic functions and their integrals but also to examine the related ideas and theorems with an unprecedented degree of rigor. Weyl's two-part treatment begins by defining the concept and topology of Riemann surfaces and concludes with an exploration of functions of Riemann surfaces. His teachings illustrate the role of Riemann surfaces as not only devices for visualizing the values of analytic functions but also as indispensable components of the theory.
650 _aRiemann surfaces, Mathematics
942 _cBK
999 _c2810
_d2810