Matrix Completions, Moments, and Sums of Hermitian Squares
By (Author) Mihly Bakonyi
By (author) Hugo J. Woerdeman
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
18th October 2011
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
512
Hardback
532
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
879g
Intensive research in matrix completions, moments, and sums of Hermitian squares has yielded a multitude of results in recent decades. This book provides a comprehensive account of this quickly developing area of mathematics and applications and gives complete proofs of many recently solved problems. With MATLAB codes and more than 200 exercises, this book is ideal for a special topics course for graduate or advanced undergraduate students in mathematics or engineering, and will also be a valuable resource for researchers. Often driven by questions from signal processing, control theory, and quantum information, the subject of this book has inspired mathematicians from many subdisciplines, including linear algebra, operator theory, measure theory, and complex function theory. In turn, the applications are being pursued by researchers in areas such as electrical engineering, computer science, and physics. This book is self-contained, has many examples, and for the most part requires only a basic background in undergraduate mathematics, primarily linear algebra and some complex analysis. This book also includes an extensive discussion of the literature, with close to 600 references from books and journals from a wide variety of disciplines.
"This volume is warmly recommended to those students who want to get acquainted with the important field of matrix completion, interpolation and moment problems, having many applications in areas such as electrical engineering, computer science and physics. It will certainly serve also as an indispensable, basic reference for researchers."--Laszlo Kerchy, Acta-Scientiarum-Mathematicarum
Mihaly Bakonyi (1962-2010) was professor of mathematics at Georgia State University and coauthor of "Schur's Algorithm and Several Applications". Hugo J. Woerdeman is professor and head of the Department of Mathematics at Drexel University.