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  • © 2004

Tame Geometry with Application in Smooth Analysis

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Mathematics (LNM, volume 1834)

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Table of contents (11 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages N2-VIII
  2. 1. Introduction and Content

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 1-22
  3. 2. Entropy

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 23-32
  4. 3. Multidimensional Variations

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 33-45
  5. 4. Semialgebraic and Tame Sets

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 47-58
  6. 5. Variations of Semialgebraic and Tame Sets

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 59-73
  7. 6. Some Exterior Algebra

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 75-82
  8. 7. Behaviour of Variations under Polynomial Mappings

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 83-98
  9. 8. Quantitative Transversality and Cuspidal Values

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 99-107
  10. 9. Mappings of Finite Smoothness

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 109-130
  11. 10. Some Applications and Related Topics

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 131-169
  12. Glossary and References

    • Yosef Yomdin, Georges Comte
    Pages 171-186
  13. Back Matter

    Pages 187-189

About this book

The Morse-Sard theorem is a rather subtle result and the interplay between the high-order analytic structure of the mappings involved and their geometry rarely becomes apparent. The main reason is that the classical Morse-Sard theorem is basically qualitative. This volume gives a proof and also an "explanation" of the quantitative Morse-Sard theorem and related results, beginning with the study of polynomial (or tame) mappings. The quantitative questions, answered by a combination of the methods of real semialgebraic and tame geometry and integral geometry, turn out to be nontrivial and highly productive. The important advantage of this approach is that it allows the separation of the role of high differentiability and that of algebraic geometry in a smooth setting: all the geometrically relevant phenomena appear already for polynomial mappings. The geometric properties obtained are "stable with respect to approximation", and can be imposed on smooth functions via polynomial approximation.

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 39.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book USD 49.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access