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Discrete Morse theory

Discrete Morse theory is a powerful tool combining ideas in both topology and combinatorics. Invented by Robin Forman in the mid 1990s, discrete Morse theory is a combinatorial analogue of Marston Morse's classical Morse theory. Its applications are vast, including applications to topological d...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Scoville, Nicholas A
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: American Mathematical Society 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2705144
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author Scoville, Nicholas A
author_facet Scoville, Nicholas A
author_sort Scoville, Nicholas A
collection CERN
description Discrete Morse theory is a powerful tool combining ideas in both topology and combinatorics. Invented by Robin Forman in the mid 1990s, discrete Morse theory is a combinatorial analogue of Marston Morse's classical Morse theory. Its applications are vast, including applications to topological data analysis, combinatorics, and computer science. This book, the first one devoted solely to discrete Morse theory, serves as an introduction to the subject. Since the book restricts the study of discrete Morse theory to abstract simplicial complexes, a course in mathematical proof writing is the only prerequisite needed. Topics covered include simplicial complexes, simple homotopy, collapsibility, gradient vector fields, Hasse diagrams, simplicial homology, persistent homology, discrete Morse inequalities, the Morse complex, discrete Morse homology, and strong discrete Morse functions. Students of computer science will also find the book beneficial as it includes topics such as Boolean functions, evasiveness, and has a chapter devoted to some computational aspects of discrete Morse theory. The book is appropriate for a course in discrete Morse theory, a supplemental text to a course in algebraic topology or topological combinatorics, or an independent study.
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spelling cern-27051442021-04-21T18:12:40Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2705144engScoville, Nicholas ADiscrete Morse theoryMathematical Physics and MathematicsDiscrete Morse theory is a powerful tool combining ideas in both topology and combinatorics. Invented by Robin Forman in the mid 1990s, discrete Morse theory is a combinatorial analogue of Marston Morse's classical Morse theory. Its applications are vast, including applications to topological data analysis, combinatorics, and computer science. This book, the first one devoted solely to discrete Morse theory, serves as an introduction to the subject. Since the book restricts the study of discrete Morse theory to abstract simplicial complexes, a course in mathematical proof writing is the only prerequisite needed. Topics covered include simplicial complexes, simple homotopy, collapsibility, gradient vector fields, Hasse diagrams, simplicial homology, persistent homology, discrete Morse inequalities, the Morse complex, discrete Morse homology, and strong discrete Morse functions. Students of computer science will also find the book beneficial as it includes topics such as Boolean functions, evasiveness, and has a chapter devoted to some computational aspects of discrete Morse theory. The book is appropriate for a course in discrete Morse theory, a supplemental text to a course in algebraic topology or topological combinatorics, or an independent study.American Mathematical Societyoai:cds.cern.ch:27051442019
spellingShingle Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
Scoville, Nicholas A
Discrete Morse theory
title Discrete Morse theory
title_full Discrete Morse theory
title_fullStr Discrete Morse theory
title_full_unstemmed Discrete Morse theory
title_short Discrete Morse theory
title_sort discrete morse theory
topic Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2705144
work_keys_str_mv AT scovillenicholasa discretemorsetheory