Английская Википедия:Curvature of Space and Time, with an Introduction to Geometric Analysis

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First edition

Curvature of Space and Time, with an Introduction to Geometric Analysis is an undergraduate-level textbook for mathematics and physics students on differential geometry, focusing on applications to general relativity. It was written by Iva Stavrov, based on a course she taught at the 2013 Park City Mathematics Institute and subsequently at Lewis & Clark College,Шаблон:R and was published in 2020 by the American Mathematical Society, as part of their Student Mathematical Library book series.Шаблон:R

Topics

Curvature of Space and Time is arranged into five chapters with 14 sections in total, with each section covering a single lecture's worth of material.Шаблон:R Its topics are covered both mathematically and historically, with reference to the original source material of Bernhard Riemann and others.Шаблон:R However, it deliberately avoids some topics from differential topology that have traditionally been covered in differential geometry courses, including abstract manifolds and tangent vectors.Шаблон:R Instead, it approaches the subject through coordinate-based geometry, emphasizing quantities that are invariant under changes of coordinates. Its goals include both providing a shortened path for students to reach an understanding of Einstein's mathematics, and promoting curvature as a central way of describing shape and geometry.Шаблон:R

The first chapter defines Riemannian manifolds as embedded subsets of Euclidean spaces rather than as abstract spaces. It uses Christoffel symbols to formulate differential equations having the geodesics as their solutions,Шаблон:R and describes the Koszul formula and energy functionalШаблон:R Examples include the Euclidean metric, spherical geometry, projective geometry, and the Poincaré half-plane model of the hyperbolic plane.Шаблон:R Chapter 2 includes vector fields, gradients, divergence,Шаблон:R directional derivatives, tensor calculus,Шаблон:R Lie brackets,Шаблон:R Green's identities, the maximum principle, and the Levi-Civita connection.Шаблон:R It begins a discussion of curvature and the Riemann curvature tensor that is continued into Chapter 3,Шаблон:R "the heart of the book",Шаблон:R whose topics include Jacobi fields, Ricci curvature, scalar curvature,Шаблон:R Myers's theorem, the Bishop–Gromov inequality, and parallel transport.Шаблон:R

After these mathematical preliminaries, the final two chapters are more physical, with the fourth chapter concerning special relativity, general relativity, the Schwarzschild metric,Шаблон:R and Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates.Шаблон:R Topics in the final chapter include geometric analysis, Poisson's equation for the potential fields of charge distributions, and mass in general relativity.Шаблон:R

Audience and reception

As is usual for a textbook, Curvature of Space and Time has exercises that extend the coverage of its topics and make it suitable as the text for undergraduate courses. Although there are multiple undergraduate-level textbooks on differential geometry, they have generally taken an abstract mathematical view of the subject, and at the time of publishing of Curvature of Space and Time, courses based on this material had somewhat fallen out of fashion. This book is unusual in taking a more direct approach to the parts of the subject that are most relevant to physics. However, although it attempts to cover this material in a self-contained way, reviewer Mark Hunacek warns that it may be too advanced for typical mathematics students, and perhaps better reserved for honors students as well as "mathematically sophisticated physics majors". He also suggests the book as an introduction to the area for researchers in other topics.Шаблон:R

Reviewer Hans-Bert Rademacher calls this a "remarkable book", with "excellent motivations and insights", but suggests it as a supplement to standard texts and courses rather than as the main basis for teaching this material.Шаблон:R And although finding fault with a few details, reviewer Justin Corvino suggests that, with faculty guidance over these rough spots, the book would be suitable both for independent study or an advanced topics course, and "required reading" for students enthusiastic about learning the mathematics behind Einstein's theories.Шаблон:R

References

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