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Groups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theory

The history of invariant theory spans nearly a century and a half, with roots in certain problems from number theory, algebra, and geometry appearing in the work of Gauss, Jacobi, Eisenstein, and Hermite. Although the connection between invariants and orbits was essentially discovered in the work of...

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Autor principal: Popov, V L
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: American Mathematical Society 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2623269
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author Popov, V L
author_facet Popov, V L
author_sort Popov, V L
collection CERN
description The history of invariant theory spans nearly a century and a half, with roots in certain problems from number theory, algebra, and geometry appearing in the work of Gauss, Jacobi, Eisenstein, and Hermite. Although the connection between invariants and orbits was essentially discovered in the work of Aronhold and Boole, a clear understanding of this connection had not been achieved until recently, when invariant theory was in fact subsumed by a general theory of algebraic groups. Written by one of the major leaders in the field, this book provides an excellent, comprehensive exposition of invariant theory. Its point of view is unique in that it combines both modern and classical approaches to the subject. The introductory chapter sets the historical stage for the subject, helping to make the book accessible to nonspecialists.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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spelling cern-26232692021-04-21T18:47:12Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2623269engPopov, V LGroups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theoryMathematical Physics and MathematicsThe history of invariant theory spans nearly a century and a half, with roots in certain problems from number theory, algebra, and geometry appearing in the work of Gauss, Jacobi, Eisenstein, and Hermite. Although the connection between invariants and orbits was essentially discovered in the work of Aronhold and Boole, a clear understanding of this connection had not been achieved until recently, when invariant theory was in fact subsumed by a general theory of algebraic groups. Written by one of the major leaders in the field, this book provides an excellent, comprehensive exposition of invariant theory. Its point of view is unique in that it combines both modern and classical approaches to the subject. The introductory chapter sets the historical stage for the subject, helping to make the book accessible to nonspecialists.American Mathematical Societyoai:cds.cern.ch:26232692011
spellingShingle Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
Popov, V L
Groups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theory
title Groups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theory
title_full Groups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theory
title_fullStr Groups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theory
title_full_unstemmed Groups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theory
title_short Groups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theory
title_sort groups, generators, syzygies, and orbits in invariant theory
topic Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2623269
work_keys_str_mv AT popovvl groupsgeneratorssyzygiesandorbitsininvarianttheory