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Lectures on Advances in Combinatorics

  • Textbook
  • © 2008

Overview

  • Written by specialists of the subject
  • High educational value because it presents some very impressive research results, that have not appeared - for the most part - in book form
  • Some theorems are of breathtaking depth and importance
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: Universitext (UTX)

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Table of contents (6 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

The lectures concentrate on highlights in Combinatorial (ChaptersII and III) and Number Theoretical (ChapterIV) Extremal Theory, in particular on the solution of famous problems which were open for many decades. However, the organization of the lectures in six chapters does neither follow the historic developments nor the connections between ideas in several cases. With the speci?ed auxiliary results in ChapterI on Probability Theory, Graph Theory, etc., all chapters can be read and taught independently of one another. In addition to the 16 lectures organized in 6 chapters of the main part of the book, there is supplementary material for most of them in the Appendix. In parti- lar, there are applications and further exercises, research problems, conjectures, and even research programs. The following books and reports [B97], [ACDKPSWZ00], [A01], and [ABCABDM06], mostly of the authors, are frequently cited in this book, especially in the Appendix, and we therefore mark them by short labels as [B], [N], [E], and [G]. We emphasize that there are also “Exercises” in [B], a “Problem Section” with contributions by several authors on pages 1063–1105 of [G], which are often of a combinatorial nature, and “Problems and Conjectures” on pages 172–173 of [E].

Reviews

From the reviews:

"The book has some very useful auxiliary material for researchers, namely the open problems at the end of each chapter, and the Appendix at the end of the book. … there are exercises at the end of each chapter as well. … the book will be very useful for researchers, and it could serve as the basis of graduate seminar, where each participant presents the material of one lecture covered in this book." (Miklós Bóna, MAA Online, January, 2009)

“The present book concentrates on special topics in Combinatorial theory. … At the end of each chapter are exercises, open research problems, and conjectures. More additional material including applications and possible research programs can be found in the Appendix. … The book can be used as a study material for an advanced graduate course on Combinatorial Theory.” (Ludovit Niepel, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1182, 2010)

Authors and Affiliations

  • Fakultät für Mathematik, Universität Bielefeld, 33615, Germany

    Rudolf Ahlswede

  • Institute of Information Transmission Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences, 127994, Russia

    Vladimir Blinovsky

About the authors

Rudolf Ahlswede, Professor emeritus of Bielefeld University, has been engaged in research projects to advance a ''General Theory of Information Transfer'' since his retirement in 2003. He is one of the leading experts in combinatorics, number theory and information theory and has been awarded international prizes and honours, for instance a Honorary Doctorate of the Russian Academy of Sciences in 2001, the Humboldt-Japan Society Senior Scientist Award 1998/99, a Paul Erdös Monetary Award (with Levon Khachatrian) in 1996, the Claude-Elwood-Shannon-Award 2006 of the IEEE Information Theory Society. Since 2004 he has been a member of the European Academy of Sciences.

 Vladimir Blinovsky has been based at the Institute for Information Transmission Problems of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow since 1981. His scientific interests include combinatorics, coding theory, probability theory, large deviations, and information theory, subjects he has taught in Russia, France, the USA, and Germany.

Bibliographic Information

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