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Topics in Harmonic Analysis and Ergodic Theory - Blackwell Online - 0 views

  • Topics in Harmonic Analysis and Ergodic Theory Joseph M. Rosenblatt, Alexander M. Stokolos, Ahmed I. Zayed ISBN: 0821842358 Paperback American Mathematical Society Usually despatched within 3 to 9 days
  • There are strong connections between harmonic analysis and ergodic theory. A recent example of this interaction is the proof of the spectacular result by Terence Tao and Ben Green that the set of prime numbers contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions. The breakthrough achieved by Tao and Green is attributed to applications of techniques from ergodic theory and harmonic analysis to problems in number theory.Articles in the present volume are based on talks delivered by plenary speakers at a conference on Harmonic Analysis and Ergodic Theory (DePaul University, Chicago, December 2-4, 2005). Of ten articles, four are devoted to ergodic theory and six to harmonic analysis, although some may fall in either category. The articles are grouped in two parts arranged by topics. Among the topics are ergodic averages, central limit theorems for random walks, Borel foliations, ergodic theory and low pass filters, data fitting using smooth surfaces, Nehari's theorem for a polydisk, uniqueness theorems for multi-dimensional trigonometric series, and Bellman and s-functions.In addition to articles on current research topics in harmonic analysis and ergodic theory, this book contains survey articles on convergence problems in ergodic theory and uniqueness problems on multi-dimensional trigonometric series.
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A few combinatorial problems in harmonic analysis (MSRI online video) - 0 views

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    Laba, Izabella
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Nilpotent groups and non-conventional ergodic theorems (online video) - 0 views

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    Hillel Furstenberg
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Non-conventional Ergodic Averages (online video) - 0 views

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    Bryna Kra
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From Arithmetic Progressions to Nilpotent Groups; A Chapter in Contemporary Ergodic The... - 0 views

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    Tenth Karl Stromberg Memorial Lecture, Hillel (Harry) Furstenberg
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Science News Online: Ivars Peterson's MathTrek (6/26/99): The Return of Zeta - 0 views

  • References: Cipra, B. 1998. A prime case of chaos. In What's Happening in the Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 4. Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society. (Available at http://www.ams.org/new-in-math/happening.html.) ______. 1996. Prime formula weds number theory and quantum physics. Science 274(Dec. 20):2014. Davis, P.J., and R. Hersch. 1981. The Mathematical Experience. New York: Viking Penguin. Katz, N.M., and P. Sarnak. 1999. Zeroes of zeta functions and symmetry. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 36(January):1. Peterson, I. 1995. Cavities of chaos. Science News 147(April 29):264. Richards, I. 1978. Number theory. In Mathematics Today: Twelve Informal Essays. L.A. Steen, ed. New York: Springer-Verlag. Peter Sarnak's lecture on random matrix models in number theory and quantum mechanics is available at http://www.msri.org/publications/video/fall98/mandm.html. Andrew Odlyzko's Web page at http://www.research.att.com/~amo/ features computations of the zeros of the zeta function.
  • The Riemann hypothesis was first proposed in 1859 by the German mathematician Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann (1826-1866). It concerns the so-called zeta function, which encodes a great deal of information about the seemingly haphazard distribution of prime numbers among the integers (see The Mark of Zeta, June 19, 1999).
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