Lattices and Ordered Sets 2009th Edition by Steven Roman (PDF)

1

 

Ebook Info

  • Published: 2009
  • Number of pages: 320 pages
  • Format: PDF
  • File Size: 1.00 MB
  • Authors: Steven Roman

Description

This book is intended to be a thorough introduction to the subject of order and lattices, with an emphasis on the latter. It can be used for a course at the graduate or advanced undergraduate level or for independent study. Prerequisites are kept to a minimum, but an introductory course in abstract algebra is highly recommended, since many of the examples are drawn from this area. This is a book on pure mathematics: I do not discuss the applications of lattice theory to physics, computer science or other disciplines. Lattice theory began in the early 1890s, when Richard Dedekind wanted to know the answer to the following question: Given three subgroups EF , and G of an abelian group K, what is the largest number of distinct subgroups that can be formed using these subgroups and the operations of intersection and sum (join), as in E?FßÐE?FÑ?GßE?ÐF?GÑ and so on? In lattice-theoretic terms, this is the number of elements in the relatively free modular lattice on three generators. Dedekind [15] answered this question (the answer is #)) and wrote two papers on the subject of lattice theory, but then the subject lay relatively dormant until Garrett Birkhoff, Oystein Ore and others picked it up in the 1930s. Since then, many noted mathematicians have contributed to the subject, including Garrett Birkhoff, Richard Dedekind, Israel Gelfand, George Grätzer, Aleksandr Kurosh, Anatoly Malcev, Oystein Ore, Gian-Carlo Rota, Alfred Tarski and Johnny von Neumann.

User’s Reviews

Editorial Reviews: Review From the reviews:”This text … deals with basic material in the areas of ordered sets and lattices and is aimed at advanced undergraduate or (more likely) beginning graduate students. … The choice and coverage of the material involved is excellent and the presentation is pleasantly lucid … . Throughout the text the arguments are clear and sound, and at the end of each chapter there is a good selection of exercises to whet the reader’s appetite. … this is a worthy addition to the lattice theory literature.” (T. S. Blyth, Mathematical Reviews, Issue 2009 f) From the Back Cover This book is intended to be a thorough introduction to the subject of ordered sets and lattices, with an emphasis on the latter. It can be used for a course at the graduate or advanced undergraduate level or for independent study. Prerequisites are kept to a minimum, but an introductory course in abstract algebra is highly recommended, since many of the examples are drawn from this area. The book has an excellent choice of topics, including a chapter on well ordering and ordinal numbers, which is not usually found in other texts. The approach is user-friendly and the presentation is lucid. There are more than 240 carefully chosen exercises. Topic coverage includes: modular, semimodular and distributive lattices, boolean algebras, representation of distributive lattices, algebraic lattices, congruence relations on lattices, free lattices, fixed-point theorems, duality theory and more. Steven Roman is the author of many successful textbooks, including Advanced Linear Algebra, 3rd Edition (Springer 2007), Field Theory, 2nd Edition (Springer 2005), and Introduction to the Mathematics of Finance (2004).

Keywords

Free Download Lattices and Ordered Sets 2009th Edition in PDF format
Lattices and Ordered Sets 2009th Edition PDF Free Download
Download Lattices and Ordered Sets 2009th Edition 2009 PDF Free
Lattices and Ordered Sets 2009th Edition 2009 PDF Free Download
Download Lattices and Ordered Sets 2009th Edition PDF
Free Download Ebook Lattices and Ordered Sets 2009th Edition

Previous articleSketches of an Elephant: A Topos Theory Compendium (Oxford Logic Guides, 43 & 44) 1st Edition by Peter T. Johnstone (PDF)
Next articleFermat’s Last Theorem for Amateurs by Paulo Ribenboim (PDF)