Spinning Tops: A Course on Integrable Systems

Spinning Tops: A Course on Integrable Systems

1996 • 148 pages

Since the time of Lagrange and Euler, it has been well known that an understanding of algebraic curves can illuminate the picture of rigid bodies provided by classical mechanics. Many mathematicians have established a modern view of the role played by algebraic geometry in recent years. This book presents some of these modern techniques, which fall within the orbit of finite dimensional integrable systems. The main body of the text presents a rich assortment of methods and ideas from algebraic geometry prompted by classical mechanics, while in appendices the author describes general, abstract theory. She gives the methods a topological application, for the first time in book form, to the study of Liouville tori and their bifurcations.

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86 primary books

Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics

Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics is a 86-book series with 89 primary works first released in 1982 with contributions by Peter T. Johnstone, Jean-Pierre Kahane, and J. Lambek.

Stone Spaces
Some Random Series of Functions
Introduction to Higher-Order Categorical Logic
Commutative Ring Theory
Finite Group Theory
Local Representation Theory: Modular Representations as an Introduction to the Local Representation Theory of Finite Groups
An Introduction to the Theory of the Riemann Zeta-Function
Algebraic Homotopy
Introductory Lectures on Siegel Modular Forms
Clifford Algebras and Dirac Operators in Harmonic Analysis
Topics in Metric Fixed Point Theory
Representations and Cohomology: Volume 1, Basic Representation Theory of Finite Groups and Associative Algebras

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