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020 _a9781441928078 (pbk.)
_c€ 49.99
040 _bENG
_cIISER-BPR
041 _aENG
082 _a516.35
_bHAR
_223rd
100 _aHartshorne, Robin
_91061
222 _aMathematics
245 0 _aAlgebraic geometry
250 _a1st ed.
260 _aNew York:
_bSpringer Science,
_cc1977.
300 _axvi, 496p. :
_c24cm
440 _aGraduate texts in mathematics
_vVol. 52
_92584
504 _aIncludes appendices, bibliographic references, results from algebra, glossary of notations and subject index.
520 _aRobin Hartshorne studied algebraic geometry with Oscar Zariski and David Mumford at Harvard, and with J.-P. Serre and A. Grothendieck in Paris. After receiving his Ph.D. from Princeton in 1963, Hartshorne became a Junior Fellow at Harvard, then taught there for several years. In 1972 he moved to California where he is now Professor at the University of California at Berkeley. He is the author of "Residues and Duality" (1966), "Foundations of Projective Geometry (1968), "Ample Subvarieties of Algebraic Varieties" (1970), and numerous research titles. His current research interest is the geometry of projective varieties and vector bundles. He has been a visiting professor at the College de France and at Kyoto University, where he gave lectures in French and in Japanese, respectively. Professor Hartshorne is married to Edie Churchill, educator and psychotherapist, and has two sons. He has travelled widely, speaks several foreign languages, and is an experienced mountain climber. He is also an accomplished amateur musician: he has played the flute for many years, and during his last visit to Kyoto he began studying the shakuhachi.
650 _aMathematics
_92585
650 _aGeometry
_92586
650 _aAlgebraic geometry
_92587
942 _cBK
_2ddc
942 _2ddc
947 _a5453.909
948 _a22
999 _c4201
_d4201