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Não Ficção QA155.SPR. FCT 94899 (Browse shelf) 1 Available
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QA315.SPR. FCT 94895 Introduction to symplectic dirac operators QA274.42.SPR. FCT 94896 Point process theory and applications QA387.SPR. FCT 94898 Cycle spaces of flag domains QA155.SPR. FCT 94899 Basic algebra QA564.SPR. FCT 94900 Algebraic geometry and number theory QA177.SPR. FCT 94902 Classes of finite groups QA334.SPR. FCT 94903 Intelligent algorithms in ambient and biomedical computing

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Basic Algebra and Advanced Algebra systematically develop concepts and tools in algebra that are vital to every mathematician, whether pure or applied, aspiring or established. Together, the two books give the reader a global view of algebra and its role in mathematics as a whole. Key topics and features of Basic Algebra: *Linear algebra and group theory build on each other continually *Chapters on modern algebra treat groups, rings, fields, modules, and Galois groups, with emphasis on methods of computation throughout *Three prominent themes recur and blend together at times: the analogy between integers and polynomials in one variable over a field, the interplay between linear algebra and group theory, and the relationship between number theory and geometry *Many examples and hundreds of problems are included, along with a separate 90-page section giving hints or complete solutions for most of the problems *The exposition proceeds from the particular to the general, often providing examples well before a theory that incorporates them; includes blocks of problems that introduce additional topics and applications for further study *Applications to science and engineering (e.g., the fast Fourier transform, the theory of error-correcting codes, the use of the Jordan canonical form in solving linear systems of ordinary differential equations, and constructions of interest in mathematical physics) appear in sequences of problems Basic Algebra presents the subject matter in a forward-looking way that takes into account its historical development. It is suitable as a text in a two-semester advanced undergraduate or first-year graduate sequence in algebra, possibly supplemented by some material from Advanced Algebra at the graduate level. It requires of the reader only familiarity with matrix algebra, an understanding of the geometry and reduction of linear equations, and an acquaintance with proofs.

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