1st Edition

Transition to Analysis with Proof

By Steven Krantz Copyright 2018
    362 Pages 43 B/W Illustrations
    by Chapman & Hall

    362 Pages 43 B/W Illustrations
    by Chapman & Hall

    362 Pages 43 B/W Illustrations
    by Chapman & Hall

    Transition to Real Analysis with Proof provides undergraduate students with an introduction to analysis including an introduction to proof. The text combines the topics covered in a transition course to lead into a first course on analysis. This combined approach allows instructors to teach a single course where two were offered.

    The text opens with an introduction to basic logic and set theory, setting students up to succeed in the study of analysis. Each section is followed by graduated exercises that both guide and challenge students. The author includes examples and illustrations that appeal to the visual side of analysis. The accessible structure of the book makes it an ideal refence for later years of study or professional work.

     

    • Combines the author’s previous works Elements of Advanced Mathematics with Foundations of Analysis
    • Combines logic, set theory and other elements with a one-semester introduction to analysis.
    • Author is a well-known mathematics educator and researcher
    • Targets a trend to combine two courses into one

    Chapter 1 Basic Logic; Chapter 2 Methods of Proof; Chapter 3 Set TheoryChapter 4 Relations and Functions; Chapter 5 Essential Number Systems Chapter 6 Sequences; Chapter 7 Series of Numbers; Chapter 8 Basic Topology Open and Closed Sets; Chapter 9 Limits and Continuity of Functions; Chapter 10 Differentiation of Functions; Chapter 11 The Integral; APPENDIX: Construction of The Weierstrass Nowhere Differentiable Function; Chapter 12 Sequences and Series of Functions; APPENDIX: Proof of the Weierstrass Approximation Theorem; Chapter 13 Elementary Transcendental Functions APPENDIX I Elementary Number Systems Table NotationGlossary Bibliography, Index

    Biography

    Steven G. Krantz is a professor at Washington University in St. Louis where he teaches mathematics. He received his Ph.D. from Princeton University and since then has taught at UCLA, Princeton University, and Pennsylvania State University. Dr. Krantz has written over 175 scholarly papers and more than 65 books. He is the founding editor of the Journal of Geometric Analysis. He was named a fellow of the American Mathematical Society and has received the Chauvenet Prize, Beckenbach Book Award, and Kemper Prize.

    This book is designed for undergraduate students and provides an introduction to analysis including an introduction to proofs. Namely, it starts with basic logic along with set theory and suggests plenty of instructive examples on how to do a correct mathematical reasoning. Then, he moves to functions, sequences, basic topology, differentiation, and integration. The text ends with power series and elementary transcendental functions. Each section of the book has a clear and convenient structure. It opens with "Preliminary remarks", which in a few sentences explain what the following passage is about. Then, the main text follows in which every statement is equipped with an instructive proof. Examples and exercises help master the material of the topic. \A look back" blocks consist of a few simple questions (like "What is a monotone sequence?") and serve as a test if you understand the basics.

    General remarks. The language of the book is quite vivid and lively, at the same time it is available for non-native students. The text has useful navigation tools like glossary, index, and the table of notations. The only disadvantage, in my opinion, is the lack of solutions and answers to the exercises.

    Nikita Evseev (Novosibirsk)