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Fourier Analysis on Number Fields
 
 

Fourier Analysis on Number Fields [Hardcover]

Dinakar Ramakrishnan , Robert J. Valenza
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product Description

A modern approach to number theory through a blending of complementary algebraic and analytic perspectives, emphasising harmonic analysis on topological groups. The main goal is to cover John Tates visionary thesis, giving virtually all of the necessary analytic details and topological preliminaries -- technical prerequisites that are often foreign to the typical, more algebraically inclined number theorist. While most of the existing treatments of Tates thesis are somewhat terse and less than complete, the intent here is to be more leisurely, more comprehensive, and more comprehensible. While the choice of objects and methods is naturally guided by specific mathematical goals, the approach is by no means narrow. In fact, the subject matter at hand is germane not only to budding number theorists, but also to students of harmonic analysis or the representation theory of Lie groups. The text addresses students who have taken a year of graduate-level course in algebra, analysis, and topology. Moreover, the work will act as a good reference for working mathematicians interested in any of these fields.

Book Info

Provides a modern approach to number theory through a blending of complementary algebraic and analytic perspectives, emphasizing harmonic analysis on topological groups. DLC: Fourier analysis.

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Our work begins with the development of a topological framework for the key elements of our subject. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars one more opinion, Oct 18 2002
This review is from: Fourier Analysis on Number Fields (Hardcover)
I don't agree with the previous reviewer about the value of this
book - I think that with several minor exceptions there is nothing in this book which could justify its publication.
Of course, as it is clear to every expert, there is nothing
really new in this book; but sometimes one can rewrite old
things in such a way that a new book is justified.
With the material of this book I know much better expositions
of every chapter of it (including harmonic analysis, number theory and Tate-Iwasawa method) in other sourses.
There are also some mistakes and errors (for example,
the Poisson summation formula is not proven),
some of which may cause the reader
think that there were mistakes on the original works.

This text could have appeared online as lecture notes,
but the publication of it by Springer confirm the well known fact of degradation of their mathematical series.

D. Ziegler

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars A treat for beginners to some exciting areas of mathematics, July 12 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Fourier Analysis on Number Fields (Hardcover)
"Fourier Analysis on Number Fields" provides a much-needed graduate text for number theorists and group theorists. Though necessarily difficult in parts because of the complicated material it covers, it is very manageable for a student. It includes a number of exercises at the end of each of its seven chapters. At the same time, it is very valuable for a researcher. Perhaps its best feature are the wonderful introductions to each chapter. These give insightful historical overviews, in keeping with the authors' theme of presenting material from disparate sources together in a coherent text. It is obvious that they spent a lot of attention on the beginner's needs.

Indeed, existing texts cover most if not all of the material in this new book. Others, including some new books on automorphic forms, take the reader much further. However, not everyone has the same starting point and all of these can be very frustrating for a beginner. The novelty and utility in this book is that it does not assume the reader comes from some particular background. Off-hand I could name five or six other books I would consult to learn the material "FANF" covers. But each comes from a different community of mathematicians, with their own jargon, in different eras, and are intended for different audiences. "FANF" sacrifices some proofs for clarity, and gives references to the classical sources for further details.

One of the authors' goals was to give explicit background on the structure of the fields involved, particularly the delicate arithmetic structure of number fields which is sometimes frustrating to learn from other sources. They have covered the structure of locally-compact fields very well and clearly. In fact, in one of our graduate courses at Yale University last fall, lectures on p-adic groups and trees were based out of the presentation in "FANF." The book is very concrete, which is especially useful for analysts who aren't used to doing integrals over, say, function fields in finite characteristic. I think it will be a favorite amongst this community - it treats advanced stages of "math phobia."

At the same time this is the natural book for an introductory course on modern automorphic forms. It completely covers the GL(1) theory and leaves the reader in an excellent position to continue on to study the Jacquet-Langlands theory. It has a nice treatment of L-functions, and even includes some analytic results which feature prominently in the recent research of one of the authors. There isn't a book that I know of which fits the nice "FANF" occupies, and better yet, it complements the earlier ones very well.

Let me just mention two examples of recent research which explain why I think a book covering its various topics is so important. Hyman Bass and Alex Lubotzky found a counter-example to the Platonov conjecture. This problem involves the representation theory of profinite groups, and lattices acting on trees. "FANF" has beautiful treatments of these. At the same time, a key ingredient of their proof was understanding the cohomology of discrete subgroups of Lie groups. Ultimately this can be interpreted as a problem in automorphic forms! In fact, they used results of David Vogan and Gregg Zuckerman about cohomological representations in their work. Another example is that the "Selberg Property-Tau" has become very important in p-adic group theory; it originated as a bound on Laplace eigenvalues in modular forms. Fortunately these aspects of algebraic groups are becoming more deeply linked, and "FANF" is a most-recommended book to start learning any of these subjects from.

Stephen D. Miller Department of Mathematics Yale University

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)

26 of 27 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A treat for beginners to some exciting areas of mathematics, July 11 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fourier Analysis on Number Fields (Hardcover)
"Fourier Analysis on Number Fields" provides a much-needed graduate text for number theorists and group theorists. Though necessarily difficult in parts because of the complicated material it covers, it is very manageable for a student. It includes a number of exercises at the end of each of its seven chapters. At the same time, it is very valuable for a researcher. Perhaps its best feature are the wonderful introductions to each chapter. These give insightful historical overviews, in keeping with the authors' theme of presenting material from disparate sources together in a coherent text. It is obvious that they spent a lot of attention on the beginner's needs.

Indeed, existing texts cover most if not all of the material in this new book. Others, including some new books on automorphic forms, take the reader much further. However, not everyone has the same starting point and all of these can be very frustrating for a beginner. The novelty and utility in this book is that it does not assume the reader comes from some particular background. Off-hand I could name five or six other books I would consult to learn the material "FANF" covers. But each comes from a different community of mathematicians, with their own jargon, in different eras, and are intended for different audiences. "FANF" sacrifices some proofs for clarity, and gives references to the classical sources for further details.

One of the authors' goals was to give explicit background on the structure of the fields involved, particularly the delicate arithmetic structure of number fields which is sometimes frustrating to learn from other sources. They have covered the structure of locally-compact fields very well and clearly. In fact, in one of our graduate courses at Yale University last fall, lectures on p-adic groups and trees were based out of the presentation in "FANF." The book is very concrete, which is especially useful for analysts who aren't used to doing integrals over, say, function fields in finite characteristic. I think it will be a favorite amongst this community - it treats advanced stages of "math phobia."

At the same time this is the natural book for an introductory course on modern automorphic forms. It completely covers the GL(1) theory and leaves the reader in an excellent position to continue on to study the Jacquet-Langlands theory. It has a nice treatment of L-functions, and even includes some analytic results which feature prominently in the recent research of one of the authors. There isn't a book that I know of which fits the nice "FANF" occupies, and better yet, it complements the earlier ones very well.

Let me just mention two examples of recent research which explain why I think a book covering its various topics is so important. Hyman Bass and Alex Lubotzky found a counter-example to the Platonov conjecture. This problem involves the representation theory of profinite groups, and lattices acting on trees. "FANF" has beautiful treatments of these. At the same time, a key ingredient of their proof was understanding the cohomology of discrete subgroups of Lie groups. Ultimately this can be interpreted as a problem in automorphic forms! In fact, they used results of David Vogan and Gregg Zuckerman about cohomological representations in their work. Another example is that the "Selberg Property-Tau" has become very important in p-adic group theory; it originated as a bound on Laplace eigenvalues in modular forms. Fortunately these aspects of algebraic groups are becoming more deeply linked, and "FANF" is a most-recommended book to start learning any of these subjects from.

Stephen D. Miller Department of Mathematics Yale University


5.0 out of 5 stars An Exellent Introductory Textbook to Modern Number Theory and Automorphic Forms, Sep 3 2009
By Song Wang "Wang, Song" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fourier Analysis on Number Fields (Hardcover)
I agree very much on what Stephen Miller said. This textbook is a very execellent introductory textbook to modern number theory. It does not require any particular math background besides elementary undergraduate maths so that it is suitable to new graduate students. The exercises are very nice and helpful. The level is a little bit challenging. I ever taught courses based on this book twice and both students and I benefit a lot.

For the contents, the textbook provides a thourough treatment on basics of modern NT such as local fields, adeles, ideles, Fourier inverse formula etc. Moreover, I think the textbook might be the best source so far I know for on Tate's thesis as a textbook. It is a perfect starting book for readers who are interested on automorphic forms. Also, just as Miller said, it is also a good reference book to mathematicians with various background, not just merely number theorists.

So I recommend this textbook strongly.

Song Wang, the Morningside Center of Mathematics, AMSS, CAS, China.

8 of 24 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars one more opinion, Oct 18 2002
By Dave Ziegler - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fourier Analysis on Number Fields (Hardcover)
I don't agree with the previous reviewer about the value of this
book - I think that with several minor exceptions there is nothing in this book which could justify its publication.
Of course, as it is clear to every expert, there is nothing
really new in this book; but sometimes one can rewrite old
things in such a way that a new book is justified.
With the material of this book I know much better expositions
of every chapter of it (including harmonic analysis, number theory and Tate-Iwasawa method) in other sourses.
There are also some mistakes and errors (for example,
the Poisson summation formula is not proven),
some of which may cause the reader
think that there were mistakes on the original works.

This text could have appeared online as lecture notes,
but the publication of it by Springer confirm the well known fact of degradation of their mathematical series.

D. Ziegler

 Go to Amazon.com to see all 3 reviews  4.0 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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