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Non-Euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spaces

This is the final volume of a three volume collection devoted to the geometry, topology, and curvature of 2-dimensional spaces. The collection provides a guided tour through a wide range of topics by one of the twentieth century's masters of geometric topology. The books are accessible to colle...

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Autor principal: Cannon, James W
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: American Mathematical Society 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2303963
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author Cannon, James W
author_facet Cannon, James W
author_sort Cannon, James W
collection CERN
description This is the final volume of a three volume collection devoted to the geometry, topology, and curvature of 2-dimensional spaces. The collection provides a guided tour through a wide range of topics by one of the twentieth century's masters of geometric topology. The books are accessible to college and graduate students and provide perspective and insight to mathematicians at all levels who are interested in geometry and topology. Einstein showed how to interpret gravity as the dynamic response to the curvature of space-time. Bill Thurston showed us that non-Euclidean geometries and curvature are essential to the understanding of low-dimensional spaces. This third and final volume aims to give the reader a firm intuitive understanding of these concepts in dimension 2. The volume first demonstrates a number of the most important properties of non-Euclidean geometry by means of simple infinite graphs that approximate that geometry. This is followed by a long chapter taken from lectures the author gave at MSRI, which explains a more classical view of hyperbolic non-Euclidean geometry in all dimensions. Finally, the author explains a natural intrinsic obstruction to flattening a triangulated polyhedral surface into the plane without distorting the constituent triangles. That obstruction extends intrinsically to smooth surfaces by approximation and is called curvature. Gauss's original definition of curvature is extrinsic rather than intrinsic. The final two chapters show that the book's intrinsic definition is equivalent to Gauss's extrinsic definition (Gauss's "Theorema Egregium" ("Great Theorem")).
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spelling cern-23039632021-04-21T18:54:21Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2303963engCannon, James WNon-Euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spacesMathematical Physics and MathematicsThis is the final volume of a three volume collection devoted to the geometry, topology, and curvature of 2-dimensional spaces. The collection provides a guided tour through a wide range of topics by one of the twentieth century's masters of geometric topology. The books are accessible to college and graduate students and provide perspective and insight to mathematicians at all levels who are interested in geometry and topology. Einstein showed how to interpret gravity as the dynamic response to the curvature of space-time. Bill Thurston showed us that non-Euclidean geometries and curvature are essential to the understanding of low-dimensional spaces. This third and final volume aims to give the reader a firm intuitive understanding of these concepts in dimension 2. The volume first demonstrates a number of the most important properties of non-Euclidean geometry by means of simple infinite graphs that approximate that geometry. This is followed by a long chapter taken from lectures the author gave at MSRI, which explains a more classical view of hyperbolic non-Euclidean geometry in all dimensions. Finally, the author explains a natural intrinsic obstruction to flattening a triangulated polyhedral surface into the plane without distorting the constituent triangles. That obstruction extends intrinsically to smooth surfaces by approximation and is called curvature. Gauss's original definition of curvature is extrinsic rather than intrinsic. The final two chapters show that the book's intrinsic definition is equivalent to Gauss's extrinsic definition (Gauss's "Theorema Egregium" ("Great Theorem")).American Mathematical Societyoai:cds.cern.ch:23039632017
spellingShingle Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
Cannon, James W
Non-Euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spaces
title Non-Euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spaces
title_full Non-Euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spaces
title_fullStr Non-Euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spaces
title_full_unstemmed Non-Euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spaces
title_short Non-Euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spaces
title_sort non-euclidean geometry and curvature: two-dimensional spaces
topic Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2303963
work_keys_str_mv AT cannonjamesw noneuclideangeometryandcurvaturetwodimensionalspaces