Riemannian Geometry
By (Author) Luther Pfahler Eisenhart
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
12th January 1998
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Differential and Riemannian geometry
Physics
516.373
Paperback
272
Width 197mm, Height 254mm
454g
In his classic work of geometry, Euclid focused on the properties of flat surfaces. In the age of exploration, mapmakers such as Mercator had to concern themselves with the properties of spherical surfaces. The study of curved surfaces, or non-Euclidean geometry, flowered in the late nineteenth century, as mathematicians such as Riemann increasingly questioned Euclid's parallel postulate, and by relaxing this constraint derived a wealth of new results. These seemingly abstract properties found immediate application in physics upon Einstein's introduction of the general theory of relativity.In this book, Eisenhart succinctly surveys the key concepts of Riemannian geometry, addressing mathematicians and theoretical physicists alike.
"Eisenhart's classic work on the application of tensor calculus to geometry was originally published in 1926 ... It is still one of the best accounts of the subject."--E. J. F. Primrose, Mathematical Gazette