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Paperback Calculus of Variations with Applications Book

ISBN: 0486648567

ISBN13: 9780486648569

Calculus of Variations with Applications

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Book Overview

This introductory text offers a far-reaching, rigorous, application-oriented approach to variational theory that will increase students' understanding of more specialized books and research papers in... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Very deep and detailed

I have had this gem of a book for ten years, and I'm still enjoying it. Actually, it turns out that the text itself was written some time ago, but don't let you be put off by that - this book is very scholarly and you really will be enlightened by it.Now, where do you begin? Usually at University, I guess, this subject is treated in a way that makes most folks think that just about all "Calculus of Variations" problems can be solved with the Euler Lagrange equation, and from there on, you just have to solve the resulting differential equation. And I guess that's sometimes possible. But in the real world, sometimes you end up with that equation simply not working, and your problem is more messy and not expressible using "nice" functions. Now, this is where this book begins. We start by looking at "sufficient" and "necessary" conditions for solutions - and these are not the same things! This at least allows you to work out whether a solution is there, for goodness sake, before you waste time trying to find it. Ewing does better in later chapters. He showcases a whole slew of problems which deserve special consideration, and this gets at times really exciting, covering all sorts of ideas about what we mean by optimum values for integrals, and how to specify systems of equations when one method doesn't really work too well.One question which he digs into, which is very entertaining, is the problem of what an integral of a function really means. For example, we all know about the Riemann integral - the limit of a sum - but had you ever heard about the Weierstrass integral - or the Lebesgue integral?Mr Ewing serves up these exotic and flavorsome new varieties in a most satisfactory fashion, with lots of examples to help.The text never gets too far away from real problems. How easy that would have been! This book is so amazingly practical and also deeply committed to a really thorough treatment. He also gives excellent commentary on the history of this subject.Overall I would say that this book is not one which belongs on the shelf with the numerical methods books, or the operational research section (thats what numerical optimisation is called over here in Britain), but I would get this now anyway before it goes out of print (if Dover are so crazy as to do that).
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