Exercises and solutions manual for integration and probability by Paul Malliavin
Autoři
Parametry
Kategorie
Více o knize
This book is designed to be an introduction to analysis with the proper mix of abstract theories and concrete problems. It starts with general measure theory, treats Borel and Radon measures (with particular attention paid to Lebesgue measure) and introduces the reader to Fourier analysis in Euclidean spaces with a treatment of Sobolev spaces, distributions, and the Fourier analysis of such. It continues with a Hilbertian treatment of the basic laws of probability including Doob's martingale convergence theorem and finishes with Malliavin's "stochastic calculus of variations" developed in the context of Gaussian measure spaces. This invaluable contribution to the existing literature gives the reader a taste of the fact that analysis is not a collection of independent theories but can be treated as a whole.
Nákup knihy
Exercises and solutions manual for integration and probability by Paul Malliavin, Ge rard Letac
- Jazyk
- Rok vydání
- 1995
Doručení
Platební metody
2021 2022 2023
Navrhnout úpravu
- Titul
- Exercises and solutions manual for integration and probability by Paul Malliavin
- Jazyk
- německy
- Autoři
- Ge rard Letac
- Vydavatel
- Springer
- Rok vydání
- 1995
- ISBN10
- 0387944214
- ISBN13
- 9780387944210
- Kategorie
- Učebnice
- Anotace
- This book is designed to be an introduction to analysis with the proper mix of abstract theories and concrete problems. It starts with general measure theory, treats Borel and Radon measures (with particular attention paid to Lebesgue measure) and introduces the reader to Fourier analysis in Euclidean spaces with a treatment of Sobolev spaces, distributions, and the Fourier analysis of such. It continues with a Hilbertian treatment of the basic laws of probability including Doob's martingale convergence theorem and finishes with Malliavin's "stochastic calculus of variations" developed in the context of Gaussian measure spaces. This invaluable contribution to the existing literature gives the reader a taste of the fact that analysis is not a collection of independent theories but can be treated as a whole.