Additive Number Theory The Classical Bases

Additive Number Theory The Classical Bases

1996 • 350 pages

The purpose of this book is to describe the classical problems in additive number theory, and to introduce the circle method and the sieve method, which are the basic analytical and combinatorial tools to attack these problems. This book is intended for students who want to learn additive number theory, not for experts who already know it. The prerequisites for this book are undergraduate courses in number theory and real analysis.

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152 primary books

#164 in Graduate Texts in Mathematics

Graduate Texts in Mathematics is a 152-book series with 154 primary works first released in 1899 with contributions by G. Takeuti, W M Zaring, and John C. Oxtoby.

#1
Introduction to Axiomatic Set Theory
#2
Measure and Category: A Survey of the Analogies between Topological and Measure Spaces
#4
A Course in Homological Algebra
#5
Category Theory
#7
A Course in Arithmetic
#9
Introduction to Lie Algebras and Representation Theory
#11
Functions of One Complex Variable
#13
Rings and Categories of Modules
#18
Measure theory
#19
A Hilbert Space Problem Book
#20
Fibre Bundles
#21
Linear Algebraic Groups

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