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Cours d'Analyse de l'Ecole Royale Polytechnique

Cours d'Analyse de l'Ecole Royale Polytechnique( )
Author: Cauchy, Augustin Louis
Series title:Cambridge Library Collection - Mathematics Ser.
ISBN:978-1-108-00208-0
Publication Date:Jul 2009
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $94.99
Book Description:

During the 1820s, the great French mathematician Augustin-Louis Cauchy taught the fundamentals of calculus at the École Royale Polytechnique in Paris. This is the influential textbook he wrote for his students. Cauchy's methods underpin the contemporary subjects of real analysis and theoretical mechanics.

Book Details
Pages:604
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):5.46 x 8.424 x 1.326 Inches
Book Weight:1.68 Pounds
Author Biography
Cauchy, Augustin-Louis (Author)
Baron Augustin Cauchy was one of the great figures of French science in the early nineteenth century. Born in Paris, Cauchy originally studied to become an engineer. Although he began his career as an engineer, illness forced him into mathematics. Cauchy made contributions to a wide variety of subjects in mathematical physics and applied mathematics. His most important work was in pure mathematics.

As a mathematician, Cauchy made major contributions to the theory of complex functions. His name is still attached to the Cauchy-Reimann equations, as well as to other fundamental concepts in mathematics, including the Cauchy integral theorem with residues, Cauchy sequences, and the Cauchy-Kovalevskaya existence theorem for the solution of partial differential equations.

As a professor at France's famous scientific school, the Ecole Polytechnique, Cauchy taught mathematics to the country's most able future scientists. His interest in presenting fundamental concepts through clear definitions and proofs through detailed and careful arguments is reflected in the textbooks he wrote. In fact, many mathematicians in the nineteenth century first learned their mathematics from the textbooks. Above all, Cauchy was responsible for the famous +g3---+le (delta-epsilon) method for defining many fundamental concepts in mathematics, including limits, continuity, and convergence. As a result, he could establish rigorously basic propositions of calculus. He was also the first to give an existence proof for the solution of a differential equation, as well as for a system of partial differential equations.

After the revolution of 1830 in France, Cauchy was forced to live in exile in Italy and Czechoslovakia.

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