Description
Takes readers from the very basic facts to the most recent results on eigenvalues of Laplace and Schroedinger operators.
About the Author
Rupert L. Frank holds a chair in applied mathematics at LMU Munich and is doing research primarily in analysis and mathematical physics. He is an invited speaker at the 2022 International Congress of Mathematics. Ari Laptev is Professor at Imperial College London. His research interests include different aspects of spectral theory and functional inequalities. He is a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Science, a Fellow of EurASc and a member of Academia Europaea. Timo Weidl is Professor at the University of Stuttgart. He works on spectral theory and mathematical physics.
Reviews
'In 1975, Lieb and Thirring proved a remarkable bound of the sum of the negative eigenvalues of a Schroedinger operator in three dimensions in terms of the L^{5/2}-norm of the potential and used it in their proof of the stability of matter. Shortly thereafter, they realized it was a case of a lovely set of inequalities which generalize Sobolev inequalities and have come to be called Lieb-Thirring bounds. This has spawned an industry with literally hundreds of papers on extensions, generalizations and optimal constants. It is wonderful to have the literature presented and synthesized by three experts who begin by giving the background necessary for this book to be useful not only to specialists but to the novice wishing to understand a deep chapter in mathematical analysis.' Barry Simon, California Institute of Technology
'In a difficult 1968 paper Dyson and Lenard succeeded in proving the 'Stability of Matter' in quantum mechanics. In 1975 a much simpler proof was developed by Thirring and me with a new, multi-function, Sobolev like inequality, as well as a bound on the negative spectrum of Schroedinger operators. These and other bounds have become an important and useful branch of functional analysis and differential equations generally and quantum mechanics in particular. This book, written by three of the leading contributors to the area, carefully lays out the entire subject in a highly readable, yet complete description of these inequalities. They also give gently, yet thoroughly, all the necessary spectral theory and Sobolev theory background that a beginning student might need.' Elliott Lieb, Princeton University
Book Information
ISBN 9781009218467
Author Rupert L. Frank
Format Hardback
Page Count 512
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 920g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 158mm * 36mm