Ten Lectures On Operator Algebras

Download Ten Lectures On Operator Algebras PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Ten Lectures On Operator Algebras book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
Ten Lectures on Operator Algebras

Author: William Arveson
language: en
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Release Date: 1984
This book contains expanded versions of ten lectures delivered at Texas Tech University in the summer of 1983. The operator algebras of the title are nonselfadjoint algebras of operators on Hilbert space.
Ten Lectures on Operator Algebras

Author: William Arveson
language: en
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Release Date: 1984
This book contains expanded versions of ten lectures delivered at Texas Tech University in the summer of 1983. The operator algebras of the title are nonselfadjoint algebras of operators on Hilbert space.
Euler Products and Eisenstein Series

This volume has three chief objectives: 1) the determination of local Euler factors on classical groups in an explicit rational form; 2) Euler products and Eisenstein series on a unitary group of an arbitrary signature; and 3) a class number formula for a totally definite hermitian form. Though these are new results that have never before been published, Shimura starts with a quite general setting. He includes many topics of an expository nature so that the book can be viewed as an introduction to the theory of automorphic forms of several variables, Hecke theory in particular. Eventually, the exposition is specialized to unitary groups, but they are treated as a model case so that the reader can easily formulate the corresponding facts for other groups. There are various facts on algebraic groups and their localizations that are standard but were proved in some old papers or just called well-known. In this book, the reader will find the proofs of many of them, as well as systematic expositions of the topics. This is the first book in which the Hecke theory of a general (nonsplit) classical group is treated. The book is practically self-contained, except that familiarity with algebraic number theory is assumed.