This book explores the topological properties of connected and path-connected solution sets for nonlinear equations in Banach spaces, focusing on the distinction between these concepts. Building on Rabinowitz's dichotomy and classical results on Peano continua, the authors introduce "congestion points"—where connected sets fail to be weakly locally connected—and examine the extent to which their presence is compatible with path-connectedness. Through rigorous analysis and examples, the book provides new insights into global bifurcations.

Structured into seven chapters, the book begins with an introduction to global bifurcation theory and foundational concepts in set theory and metric spaces. Subsequent chapters delve into connectedness, local connectedness, and congestion points, culminating in the construction of intricate examples that highlight the complexities of solution sets. The authors' careful selection of material and fluent writing style make this work a valuable resource for PhD students and experts in functional analysis and bifurcation theory.

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mso-fareast-language: EN-IN;">Structured into seven chapters, the book begins with an introduction to global bifurcation theory and foundational concepts in set theory and metric spaces.

- 1. Introduction.- 2. Set Theory Foundations.- 3. Metric Spaces.- 4. Types of Connectedness.- 5. Congestion Points.- 6. Decomposable and Indecomposable Continua.- 7. Pathological Examples.

This book explores the topological properties of connected and path-connected solution sets for nonlinear equations in Banach spaces, focusing on the distinction between these concepts. Building on Rabinowitz's dichotomy, the authors introduce "congestion points"—where connected sets fail to be locally connected—and show their absence ensures path-connectedness. Through rigorous analysis and examples, the book provides new insights into global bifurcations.

Structured into seven chapters, the book begins with an introduction to global bifurcation theory and foundational concepts in set theory and metric spaces. Subsequent chapters delve into connectedness, local connectedness, and congestion points, culminating in the construction of intricate examples that highlight the complexities of solution sets. The authors' careful selection of material and fluent writing style make this work a valuable resource for PhD students and experts in functional analysis and bifurcation theory.

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Provides new insights into the topology of solutions sets of equations in Banach spaces Applies point-set topology to the study of global bifurcations Develops the theory from first principles, assuming little background knowledge
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783031870507
Publisert
2025-04-30
Utgiver
Springer International Publishing AG
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
101

Biografisk notat

Boris Buffoni works at the Institute of Mathematics at EPFL (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland), where he has taught since 1998. His doctorate, under the supervision of Charles Stuart at EPFL, focused on nonlinear problems in the presence of  essential spectrum. He was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Bath and the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, and, from 1995 to 1998,  a lecturer at the University of Bath. His  research interests include calculus of variations, bifurcation theory, partial differential equations and applications to hydrodynamics. He is currently a senior scientist at EPFL.

John Toland is Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at the University of Bath where he was professor for 32 years before being appointed Director of the Isaac Newton Institute in Cambridge.

His PhD, under the supervision of Charles Stuart at Sussex University,  was on global bifurcation theory for k-set-contractions after which, with collaborators, he  developed topological methods  to prove the existence of large amplitude solitary waves, including the famous singular Stokes-wave-of-greatest-height. Since then he has developed aspects of convex analysis, harmonic analysis, duality theory, Nash-Moser theory and variational methods, to address nonlinear problems arising in applications.