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Geometric Theory of Foliations

Specificaties
Gebonden, 206 blz. | Engels
Birkhäuser Boston | 1985e druk, 1984
ISBN13: 9780817631390
Rubricering
Birkhäuser Boston 1985e druk, 1984 9780817631390
Verwachte levertijd ongeveer 9 werkdagen

Samenvatting

Intuitively, a foliation corresponds to a decomposition of a manifold into a union of connected, disjoint submanifolds of the same dimension, called leaves, which pile up locally like pages of a book. The theory of foliations, as it is known, began with the work of C. Ehresmann and G. Reeb, in the 1940's; however, as Reeb has himself observed, already in the last century P. Painleve saw the necessity of creating a geometric theory (of foliations) in order to better understand the problems in the study of solutions of holomorphic differential equations in the complex field. The development of the theory of foliations was however provoked by the following question about the topology of manifolds proposed by H. Hopf in the 3 1930's: "Does there exist on the Euclidean sphere S a completely integrable vector field, that is, a field X such that X· curl X • 0?" By Frobenius' theorem, this question is equivalent to the following: "Does there exist on the 3 sphere S a two-dimensional foliation?" This question was answered affirmatively by Reeb in his thesis, where he 3 presents an example of a foliation of S with the following characteristics: There exists one compact leaf homeomorphic to the two-dimensional torus, while the other leaves are homeomorphic to two-dimensional planes which accu­ mulate asymptotically on the compact leaf. Further, the foliation is C"".

Specificaties

ISBN13:9780817631390
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:gebonden
Aantal pagina's:206
Druk:1985

Inhoudsopgave

I — Differentiable Manifolds.- II — Foliations.- III — The Topology of the Leaves.- IV — Holonomy and the Stability Theorems.- V — Fiber Bundles and Foliations.- VI — Analytic Foliations of Codimension One.- VII — Novikov’s Theorem.- VIII — Topological Aspects of the Theory of Group Actions.- Appendix — Frobenius’ Theorem.- §1. Vector fields and the Lie bracket.- §2. Frobenius’ theorem.- §3. Plane fields defined by differential forms.- Exercises.

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        Geometric Theory of Foliations