Zum Hauptinhalt springen Zur Suche springen Zur Hauptnavigation springen
Herzlich Willkommen!
This textbook provides a detailed treatment of abstract integration theory, construction of the Lebesgue measure via the Riesz-Markov Theorem and also via the Carathéodory Theorem. It also includes some elementary properties of Hausdorff measures as well as the basic properties of spaces of integrable functions and standard theorems on integrals depending on a parameter. Integration on a product space, change of variables formulas as well as the construction and study of classical Cantor sets are treated in detail. Classical convolution inequalities, such as Young's inequality and Hardy-Littlewood-Sobolev inequality are proven. The Radon-Nikodym theorem, notions of harmonic analysis, classical inequalities and interpolation theorems, including Marcinkiewicz's theorem, the definition of Lebesgue points and Lebesgue differentiation theorem are further topics included.   A detailed appendix provides the reader with various elements of elementary mathematics, such as a discussion around the calculation of antiderivatives or the Gamma function. The appendix also provides more advanced material such as some basic properties of cardinals and ordinals which are useful in the study of measurability.
Autor: Lerner, Nicolas
ISBN: 9783034806930
Sprache: Englisch
Seitenzahl: 492
Produktart: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Verlag: Springer Basel
Veröffentlicht: 17.03.2014
Untertitel: including more than 150 exercises with detailed answers
Schlagworte: Fourier transformation L^p spaces Lebesgue measure measure theory
Nicolas Lerner is Professor at Université Pierre and Marie Curie in Paris, France. He held professorial positions in the United States (Purdue University), and in France. His research work is concerned with microlocal analysis and partial differential equations. His recent book Metrics on the Phase Space and Non-Selfadjoint Pseudodifferential Operators was published by Birkhäuser. He was an invited section speaker at the Beijing International Congress of Mathematicians in 2002.