1st Edition

Handbook of Complex Analysis

Edited By Steven G. Krantz Copyright 2022
546 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Chapman & Hall

546 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Chapman & Hall

546 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Chapman & Hall

In spite of being nearly 500 years old, the subject of complex analysis is still today a vital and active part of mathematics. There are important applications in physics, engineering, and other aspects of technology. This Handbook presents contributed chapters by prominent mathematicians, including the new generation of researchers. More than a compilation of recent results, this book offers... Read more
Preface
1.Something about poisson and dirichlet, Steven R. Bell and Luis Reyna de la Torre
2.The Cauchy-Leray operator for convex domains, David Barrett and Michael Bolt
3.Fractional linear maps and some applications. An “Augenblick,” Joseph A. Cima
4.Biholomorphic transformations, Buma Fridman and Daowei Ma
5.Positivity in the @-Neumann Problem, Siqi Fu
6.Symmetry and art, Emily J. Gullerud and James S. Walker
7.A glimpse into invariant distances in complex analysis, Marek Jarnicki and Peter Pflug
8.Variations on the (eternal) theme of analytic continuation, Dmitri Khavinson
9.Complex convexity, Christer Kiselman
10.Reproducing kernels in complex analysis, Steven G. Krantz
11.The Green’s function method on the Riemann mapping theorem, Bingyuan Liu
12.Polynomial trace identities in quaternion algebras and two-generator Kleinian groups, T. H.Marshall and Gaven Martin
13.Boundary value problems on klein surfaces, Vicentiu Radulescu and Monica Roşiu
Bibliography
Index 

Biography

Steven G. Krantz is a professor of mathematics at Washington University in St. Louis. He has previously taught at UCLA, Princeton University, and Pennsylvania State University. He has written more than 130 books and more than 250 scholarly papers and is the founding editor of the Journal of Geometric Analysis. An AMS Fellow, Dr. Krantz has been a recipient of the Chauvenet Prize, Beckenbach Book Award, and Kemper Prize. He received a Ph.D. from Princeton University.