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  • Online Resource  (199)
  • AV-Medium  (193)
  • 1990-1994  (206)
  • 1985-1989  (187)
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  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_9947921327902882
    Format: XIV, 246 p. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9783540478836
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Mathematics, 1255
    Content: The DD6 Symposium was, like its predecessors DD1 to DD5 both a research symposium and a summer seminar and concentrated on differential geometry. This volume contains a selection of the invited papers and some additional contributions. They cover recent advances and principal trends in current research in differential geometry.
    Note: Minimal lagrangian submanifolds of Kähler-einstein manifolds -- An estimate of the lower bound of levi form and its applications -- A global study of extremal surfaces in 3-dimensional Minkowski space -- Lie transformation groups and differential geometry -- The imbedding problem of Riemannian globally symmetric spaces of the compact type -- A Willmore type problem for S2×S2 -- The integral formula of pontrjagin characteristic forms -- Some stability results of harmonic map from a manifold with boundary -- Ck-bound of curvatures in Yang-Mills theory -- Number theoretic analogues in spectral geometry -- On the gauss map of submanifold in Rn and Sn -- Twistor constructions for harmonic maps -- On two classes of hypersurfaces in a space of constant curvature -- A constructive theory of differential algebraic geometry based on works of J.F. Ritt with particular applications to mechanical theorem-proving of differential geometries -- Remarks on the fundamental group of positively curved manifolds -- Liouville type theorems and regularity of harmonic maps -- On absence of static yang-mills fields with variant mass -- On the infinitesimal parallel displacement -- Harmonic and Killing forms on complete Riemannian manifolds.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783540178491
    Language: English
    Subjects: Physics , Mathematics
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Cover
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9947415307902882
    Format: 1 online resource (186 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9780511551567 (ebook)
    Content: Rural development is linked crucially with rural structure, though the latter is often difficult to analyse. This book analyses rural classes and the diverse relations between producers in order to understand the relationship between Third World farmers and the international economy, and the significance of this for development and underdevelopment. The author introduces a number of theoretical distinctions and devises a systematic framework which is applied to the analysis of a range of rural producers. The book assesses a number of strategies employed in planned development in the light of their implications for rural social structure, and thus for development in the Third World. This book provides an intensive and original conceptual and practical discussion of the possibilities for development under capitalism, and will be of interest to economists, political scientists and sociologists, as well as those working in development studies.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 08 Oct 2015). , 1: Development: defining the terrain -- 2: Mode of production, surplus and capitalist development -- 3: Capitalism and underdevelopment -- 4: Rural development -- 5: Social structure and failed development.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9780521392587
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_070826056
    Format: 1 CD , DDD , Beih. , 12 cm
    Series Statement: MDG-Gold
    Uniform Title: Quintette Violine (2) op. 95 f-Moll
    Note: Text des Beih. engl., franz. und dt.
    Language: Undetermined
    Keywords: CD
    Author information: Berger, Wilhelm 1861-1911
    Author information: Michaels, Jost 1922-2004
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bern : Peter Lang International Academic Publishing Group
    UID:
    gbv_177882207X
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (373 p.)
    ISBN: 9783954792375
    Series Statement: Slavistische Beitraege
    Content: Für die historisch-vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft ist der russische Akzent vor allem deshalb wesentlich, weil das Russische zu den nicht sehr zahlreichen indogermanischen Sprachen zählt, die einen freien beweglichen Akzent haben. Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit einigen speziellen Fragen der russischen Akzentologie, die neue Aspekte zum Verständnis des heutigen russischen Akzents und seiner historischen Entwicklung beitragen
    Note: German
    Language: German
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Wiesbaden : Vieweg+Teubner Verlag
    UID:
    b3kat_BV042430153
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (XII, 363S. 396 Abb)
    ISBN: 9783322898647 , 9783528046705
    Series Statement: Aus dem Programm Grundgebiete des Maschinenbaus
    Note: Der Ingenieur ist für die Konstruktion, Haltbarkeit und einwandfreie Funktion von technischen Bauteilen zuständig. Er muß für ausreichende Dimensionierung und für die Auswahl geeigneter Werkstoffe sorgen, damit die Bauteile genügend Festigkeit besitzen, um den teilweise hohen Belastungen mit Sicherheit standhalten zu können. Der Ingenieur beschäftigt sich also mit Kräften und deren Wirkung auf technische Systeme (Maschinen, Apparate, Fundamente, Gebäude usw.), wozu die Technische Mechanik die Grundlagen liefert. Um den richtigen Einstieg in dieses schwierige Gebiet zu finden, ist eine anschauliche, praxisorientierte Betrachtungsweise erforderlich, damit das Vorstellungsvermögen und das konstruktive Gefühl des Ingenieurs geweckt und gefördert wird. Wie überall in der Technik hat der Computer auch in der Mechanik die Rechenmethoden stark beeinflußt und eine weitgehende Vertiefung und Schematisierung ermöglicht. Von einem modernen Ingenieur wird daher verlangt, daß er sich mit der Handhabung des Computers vertraut macht. In der Hauptsache werden also an den Ingenieur zwei Forderungen gestellt. Zum einen muß er sich mit anschaulichen, klaren, übersichtlichen Gedanken und Vorstellungen in technische Probleme hineinversetzen konnen, zum anderen muß er auch zu einer abstrakten und schematischen Denkweise fähig sein. Die Lehrmittel für die Ausbildung der Ingenieure müssen diesen Forderungen gerecht werden und sowohl durch anschauliche zeichnerische als auch durch abstrakte rechnerische Vorgehensweise den Stoff vermitteln. Die Themen sollen so anschaulich wie möglich entwickelt werden, wobei an Skizzen nicht gespart werden darf. Sind doch gerade die Zeichnungen in Verbindung mit den mathematisch-physikalischen Formeln die eigentliche Sprache und das wichtigste Ausdrucksmittel des Ingenieurs
    Language: German
    Author information: Berger, Joachim -2012
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Wiesbaden : Vieweg+Teubner Verlag
    UID:
    b3kat_BV042430166
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (XII, 500S. 350 Abb)
    ISBN: 9783322898982 , 9783528049300
    Series Statement: Viewegs Fachbücher der Technik
    Note: Im Gegensatz zur Statik (Band 1), wo man es mit idealisierten, starren Körpern zu tun hat, muß in der Festigkeitslehre die Verformbarkeit der Körper berücksichtigt werden. Dabei geht es im wesentlichen um die Bestimmung von Spannungen und Verformungen infolge von Zug, Druck, Schub, Biegung und Torsion. Die einzelnen Spannungen werden zu einer (hypothetischen) Vergleichsspannung zusammengefaßt und den im Labor ermittelten Werkstoffdaten gegenübergestellt. Auf dieser Basis ist eine sichere und wirtschaftliche Dimensionierung der Bauteile möglich. Die Erfahrungen, die man aus bewährten Konstruktionen, aber auch aus Schadensfällen in der Praxis gewonnen hat, lassen sich mit den Formeln der Festigkeitslehre auf geometrisch ähnliche (oder durch modellmäßige Vereinfachung auch auf kompliziertere) Systeme mit genügender Genauigkeit übertragen. Ein ständiger Sollwert-Istwert-Vergleich bei der Planung, der Ausführung und dem Betrieb der Maschinen soll zu einer weitgehenden Optimierung der Bauteile führen, die vom Ingenieur durch fortwährende Berechungen und Messungen angestrebt wird. Die Gleichungen der Festigkeitslehre müssen alle Daten enthalten, die einen Einfluß auf die Spannungen und Verformungen haben konnen und sind somit komplizierter und umfangreicher als die der Statik. Maßgebend sind z. B. die Belastungsarten geometrische und physikalische Bedingungen wie Lage, Größe und Verteilung der Kräfte, Querschnitts-Abmessungen, Werkstoff­ Kennwerte, Temperatur-Einflüsse usw. Daher ist es wichtig, Wege und Mittel zu finden, um die komplexen Themen der Festigkeitslehre so einfach und anschaulich wie möglich zu entwickeln, ohne auf die mathematische Strenge bei der Ableitung und auf die Allgemeingültigkeit der Lösungen (Übertragung auf räumliche Probleme) zu verzichten
    Language: German
    Author information: Berger, Joachim -2012
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  • 7
    UID:
    almahu_9947363005502882
    Format: XII, 476 p. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9781461210337
    Series Statement: Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 115
    Content: This book consists of two parts, different in form but similar in spirit. The first, which comprises chapters 0 through 9, is a revised and somewhat enlarged version of the 1972 book Geometrie Differentielle. The second part, chapters 10 and 11, is an attempt to remedy the notorious absence in the original book of any treatment of surfaces in three-space, an omission all the more unforgivable in that surfaces are some of the most common geometrical objects, not only in mathematics but in many branches of physics. Geometrie Differentielle was based on a course I taught in Paris in 1969- 70 and again in 1970-71. In designing this course I was decisively influ­ enced by a conversation with Serge Lang, and I let myself be guided by three general ideas. First, to avoid making the statement and proof of Stokes' formula the climax of the course and running out of time before any of its applications could be discussed. Second, to illustrate each new notion with non-trivial examples, as soon as possible after its introduc­ tion. And finally, to familiarize geometry-oriented students with analysis and analysis-oriented students with geometry, at least in what concerns manifolds.
    Note: 0. Background -- 0.0 Notation and Recap -- 0.1 Exterior Algebra -- 0.2 Differential Calculus -- 0.3 Differential Forms -- 0.4 Integration -- 0.5 Exercises -- 1. Differential Equations -- 1.1 Generalities -- 1.2 Equations with Constant Coefficients. Existence of Local Solutions -- 1.3 Global Uniqueness and Global Flows -- 1.4 Time- and Parameter-Dependent Vector Fields -- 1.5 Time-Dependent Vector Fields: Uniqueness And Global Flow -- 1.6 Cultural Digression -- 2. Differentiable Manifolds -- 2.1 Submanifolds of Rn -- 2.2 Abstract Manifolds -- 2.3 Differentiable Maps -- 2.4 Covering Maps and Quotients -- 2.5 Tangent Spaces -- 2.6 Submanifolds, Immersions, Submersions and Embeddings -- 2.7 Normal Bundles and Tubular Neighborhoods -- 2.8 Exercises -- 3. Partitions of Unity, Densities and Curves -- 3.1 Embeddings of Compact Manifolds -- 3.2 Partitions of Unity -- 3.3 Densities -- 3.4 Classification of Connected One-Dimensional Manifolds -- 3.5 Vector Fields and Differential Equations on Manifolds -- 3.6 Exercises -- 4. Critical Points -- 4.1 Definitions and Examples -- 4.2 Non-Degenerate Critical Points -- 4.3 Sard’s Theorem -- 4.4 Exercises -- 5. Differential Forms -- 5.1 The Bundle ?rT*X -- 5.2 Differential Forms on a Manifold -- 5.3 Volume Forms and Orientation -- 5.4 De Rham Groups -- 5.5 Lie Derivatives -- 5.6 Star-shaped Sets and Poincaré’s Lemma -- 5.7 De Rham Groups of Spheres and Projective Spaces -- 5.8 De Rham Groups of Tori -- 5.9 Exercises -- 6. Integration of Differential Forms -- 6.1 Integrating Forms of Maximal Degree -- 6.2 Stokes’ Theorem -- 6.3 First Applications of Stokes’ Theorem -- 6.4 Canonical Volume Forms -- 6.5 Volume of a Submanifold of Euclidean Space -- 6.6 Canonical Density on a Submanifold of Euclidean Space -- 6.7 Volume of Tubes I -- 6.8 Volume of Tubes II -- 6.9 Volume of Tubes III -- 6.10 Exercises -- 7. Degree Theory -- 7.1 Preliminary Lemmas -- 7.2 Calculation of Rd(X) -- 7.3 The Degree of a Map -- 7.4 Invariance under Homotopy. Applications -- 7.5 Volume of Tubes and the Gauss-Bonnet Formula -- 7.6 Self-Maps of the Circle -- 7.7 Index of Vector Fields on Abstract Manifolds -- 7.8 Exercises -- 8. Curves: The Local Theory -- 8.0 Introduction -- 8.1 Definitions -- 8.2 Affine Invariants: Tangent, Osculating Plan, Concavity -- 8.3 Arclength -- 8.4 Curvature -- 8.5 Signed Curvature of a Plane Curve -- 8.6 Torsion of Three-Dimensional Curves -- 8.7 Exercises -- 9. Plane Curves: The Global Theory -- 9.1 Definitions -- 9.2 Jordan’s Theorem -- 9.3 The Isoperimetric Inequality -- 9.4 The Turning Number -- 9.5 The Turning Tangent Theorem -- 9.6 Global Convexity -- 9.7 The Four-Vertex Theorem -- 9.8 The Fabricius-Bjerre-Halpern Formula -- 9.9 Exercises -- 10. A Guide to the Local Theory of Surfaces in R3 -- 10.1 Definitions -- 10.2 Examples -- 10.3 The Two Fundamental Forms -- 10.4 What the First Fundamental Form Is Good For -- 10.5 Gaussian Curvature -- 10.6 What the Second Fundamental Form Is Good For -- 10.7 Links Between the two Fundamental Forms -- 10.8 A Word about Hypersurfaces in Rn+1 -- 11. A Guide to the Global Theory of Surfaces -- 11.1 Shortest Paths -- 11.2 Surfaces of Constant Curvature -- 11.3 The Two Variation Formulas -- 11.4 Shortest Paths and the Injectivity Radius -- 11.5 Manifolds with Curvature Bounded Below -- 11.6 Manifolds with Curvature Bounded Above -- 11.7 The Gauss-Bonnet and Hopf Formulas -- 11.8 The Isoperimetric Inequality on Surfaces -- 11.9 Closed Geodesics and Isosystolic Inequalities -- 11.10 Surfaces AU of Whose Geodesics Are Closed -- 11.11 Transition: Embedding and Immersion Problems -- 11.12 Surfaces of Zero Curvature -- 11.13 Surfaces of Non-Negative Curvature -- 11.14 Uniqueness and Rigidity Results -- 11.15 Surfaces of Negative Curvature -- 11.16 Minimal Surfaces -- 11.17 Surfaces of Constant Mean Curvature, or Soap Bubbles -- 11.18 Weingarten Surfaces -- 11.19 Envelopes of Families of Planes -- 11.20 Isoperimetric Inequalities for Surfaces -- 11.21 A Pot-pourri of Characteristic Properties -- Index of Symbols and Notations.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9781461269922
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
    UID:
    almahu_9947363024602882
    Format: X, 406 pp. 364 figs. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9783540938163
    Series Statement: Universitext
    Content: This is the second part of the 2-volume textbook Geometry which provides a very readable and lively presentation of large parts of geometry in the classical sense. An attractive characteristic of the book is that it appeals systematically to the reader's intuition and vision, and illustrates the mathematical text with many figures. For each topic the author presents a theorem that is esthetically pleasing and easily stated - although the proof of the same theorem may be quite hard and concealed. Many open problems and references to modern literature are given. Yet another strong trait of the book is that it provides a comprehensive and unified reference source for the field of geometry in the full breadth of its subfields and ramifications.
    Note: Polytopes; compact convex sets -- Quadratic forms -- Projective quadrics -- Affine quadrics -- Projective conics -- Euclidean conics -- The sphere for its own sake -- Elliptic and hyperbolic geometry -- The space of spheres.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783540170150
    Language: English
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York, NY :Springer New York :
    UID:
    almahu_9947363197902882
    Format: XVI, 618 p. , online resource.
    Edition: Second Edition.
    ISBN: 9781475742862
    Series Statement: Springer Series in Statistics,
    Content: In this new edition the author has added substantial material on Bayesian analysis, including lengthy new sections on such important topics as empirical and hierarchical Bayes analysis, Bayesian calculation, Bayesian communication, and group decision making. With these changes, the book can be used as a self-contained introduction to Bayesian analysis. In addition, much of the decision-theoretic portion of the text was updated, including new sections covering such modern topics as minimax multivariate (Stein) estimation.
    Note: 1 Basic Concepts -- 2 Utility and Loss -- 3 Prior Information and Subjective Probability -- 4 Bayesian Analysis -- 5 Minimax Analysis -- 6 Invariance -- 7 Preposterior and Sequential Analysis -- 8 Complete and Essentially Complete Classes -- Appendix 1 Common Statistical Densities -- I Continuous -- II Discrete -- Appendix 2 Supplement to Chapter 4 -- II Development of (4.121) and (4.122) -- III Verification of Formula (4.123) -- Appendix 3 Technical Arguments from Chapter 7 -- I Verification of Formula (7.8) -- II Verification of Formula (7.10) -- Notation and Abbreviations -- Author Index.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9781441930743
    Language: English
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  • 10
    UID:
    almahu_9947363393002882
    Format: 430 p. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9789400905795
    Series Statement: Nonlinear Topics in the Mathematical Sciences, An International Book Series dealing with Past, Current and Future Advances and Developments in the Mathematics of Nonlinear Science, 1
    Content: This is the first volume of a series of books that will describe current advances and past accompli shments of mathemat i ca 1 aspects of nonlinear sCience taken in the broadest contexts. This subject has been studied for hundreds of years, yet it is the topic in whi ch a number of outstandi ng di scoveri es have been made in the past two decades. Clearly, this trend will continue. In fact, we believe some of the great scientific problems in this area will be clarified and perhaps resolved. One of the reasons for this development is the emerging new mathematical ideas of nonlinear science. It is clear that by looking at the mathematical structures themselves that underlie experiment and observation that new vistas of conceptual thinking lie at the foundation of the unexplored area in this field. To speak of specific examples, one notes that the whole area of bifurcation was rarely talked about in the early parts of this century, even though it was discussed mathematically by Poi ncare at the end of the ni neteenth century. I n another di rect ion, turbulence has been a key observation in fluid dynamics, yet it was only recently, in the past decade, that simple computer studies brought to light simple dynamical models in which chaotic dynamics, hopefully closely related to turbulence, can be observed.
    Note: 1 Integrable Nonlinear Systems and their Perturbation -- 1.1 The Simplest Nonlinear Systems -- 1.2 Integration by Quadrature and Its Alternatives -- 1.3 Classical Mechanical Integrable Systems -- 1.4 New Ideas on Complete Integrability for Equilibrium Processes -- 1.5 Canonical Changes of Coordinates for the Mapping A -- 1.6 Bifurcation and the Integration of Nonlinear Ordinary and Partial Differential Equations -- 1.7 Qualitative Properties of Integrable Systems — Periodic and Quasiperiodic Motions of Dynamical Systems -- 1.8 Almost Periodic Motions of Dynamical Systems -- Appendix 1 Nonlinear Fredholm Operators -- Appendix 2 Bifurcation from Equilibria for Certain Infinite-Dimensional Dynamical Systems -- Appendix 3 Elementary Facts about the Linear Dirichlet Problem -- Appendix 4 On Besicovitch Almost Periodic Functions -- 2 General Principles for Nonlinear Systems -- 2.1 Differentiable Nonlinear Operators -- 2.2 Iteration of Nonlinear Operators -- 2.3 Nonlinear Fredholm Alternatives -- 2.4 The Idea of Nonlinear Desingularization -- 2.5 Variational Principles — New Ideas in the Calculus of Variations in the Large -- 2.6 Bifurcation -- 2.7 Bifurcation Into Folds -- 3 Some Connections between Global Differential Geometry and Nonlinear Analysis -- 3.1 Geodesics -- 3.2 Gauss Curvature and Its Extensions -- 3.3 Manifolds of Constant Gauss Positive Curvature -- 3.4 Mean Curvature -- 3.5 Simple Riemannian Metrics -- 3.6 Einstein Metrics -- 4 Vortices in Ideal Fluids -- 4.1 The Early History of Vortices in Fluids -- 4.2 Formulation of the Vortex Concept in Ideal Incompressible Fluids -- 4.3 Axisymmetric Vortex Motions with and without Swirl -- 4.4 Variational Principles for the Stream Function for Vortex Rings without Swirl -- 4.5 Leapfrogging of Vortices -- 4.6 Vortex Breakdown -- 4.7 Nonlinear Desingularization and Vortex Filaments -- 5 Mathematical Aspects of Superconductivity -- 5.1 The Simplest Nonlinear Yang-Mills Theory that Works -- 5.2 Physical Viewpoint -- 5.3 The Linear Approach to Superconductivity and Nonlinear Desingularization -- 5.4 Function Spaces for Symmetric Vortices -- 5.5 The Existence of Critical Points for I? Associated with Symmetric Vortices -- Problems.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9789401067485
    Language: English
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