Auxiliary Polynomials in Number Theory

Auxiliary Polynomials in Number Theory

by David Masser
ISBN-10:
1107061571
ISBN-13:
9781107061576
Pub. Date:
07/21/2016
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
ISBN-10:
1107061571
ISBN-13:
9781107061576
Pub. Date:
07/21/2016
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Auxiliary Polynomials in Number Theory

Auxiliary Polynomials in Number Theory

by David Masser
$160.0 Current price is , Original price is $160.0. You
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Overview

This unified account of various aspects of a powerful classical method, easy to understand in its simplest forms, is illustrated by applications in several areas of number theory. As well as including diophantine approximation and transcendence, which were mainly responsible for its invention, the author places the method in a broader context by exploring its application in other areas, such as exponential sums and counting problems in both finite fields and the field of rationals. Throughout the book, the method is explained in a 'molecular' fashion, where key ideas are introduced independently. Each application is the most elementary significant example of its kind and appears with detailed references to subsequent developments, making it accessible to advanced undergraduates as well as postgraduate students in number theory or related areas. It provides over 700 exercises both guiding and challenging, while the broad array of applications should interest professionals in fields from number theory to algebraic geometry.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781107061576
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 07/21/2016
Series: Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics , #207
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 6.22(w) x 9.29(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

David Masser is Emeritus Professor in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Basel, Switzerland. He started his career with Alan Baker, which gave him a grounding in modern transcendence theory and began his fascination with the method of auxiliary polynomials. His subsequent interest in applying the method to areas outside transcendence, which involved mainly problems of zero estimates, culminated in his works with Gisbert Wüstholz on isogeny and polarization estimates for abelian varieties, for which he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2005. This expertise proved beneficial in his more recent works with Umberto Zannier on problems of unlikely intersections, where zero estimates make a return appearance.

Table of Contents

Introduction; 1. Prologue; 2. Irrationality I; 3. Irrationality II - Mahler's method; 4. Diophantine equations - Runge's method; 5. Irreducibility; 6. Elliptic curves - Stepanov's method; 7. Exponential sums; 8. Irrationality measures I - Mahler; 9. Integer-valued entire functions I - Pólya; 10. Integer-valued entire functions II - Gramain; 11. Transcendence I - Mahler; 12. Irrationality measures II - Thue; 13. Transcendence II - Hermite–Lindemann; 14. Heights; 15. Equidistribution - Bilu; 16. Height lower bounds - Dobrowolski; 17. Height upper bounds; 18. Counting - Bombieri–Pila; 19. Transcendence III - Gelfond–Schneider–Lang; 20. Elliptic functions; 21. Modular functions; 22. Algebraic independence; Appendix: Néron's square root; References; Index.
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