An Introduction to G-Functions. (AM-133), Volume 133
By (Author) Bernard Dwork
By (author) Giovanni Gerotto
By (author) Francis J. Sullivan
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
2nd August 1994
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Differential calculus and equations
512.74
Paperback
352
Width 197mm, Height 254mm
510g
Written for advanced undergraduate and first-year graduate students, this book aims to introduce students to a serious level of p-adic analysis with important implications for number theory. The main object is the study of G-series, that is, power series y=aij=0 Ajxj with coefficients in an algebraic number field K. These series satisfy a linear differential equation Ly=0 with LIK(x) [d/dx] and have non-zero radii of convergence for each imbedding of K into the complex numbers. They have the further property that the common denominators of the first s coefficients go to infinity geometrically with the index s. After presenting a review of valuation theory and elementary p-adic analysis together with an application to the congruence zeta function, this book offers a detailed study of the p-adic properties of formal power series solutions of linear differential equations. In particular, the p-adic radii of convergence and the p-adic growth of coefficients are studied. Recent work of Christol, Bombieri, Andre, and Dwork is treated and augmented. The book concludes with Chudnovsky's theorem: the analytic continuation of a G -series is again a G -series. This book will be indispensable for those wishing to study the work of Bombieri and Andre on global relations and for the study of the arithmetic properties of solutions of ordinary differential equations.
"[This book] is well suited for a graduate course, its value as a textbook being enhanced by working out several concrete examples and counterexamples of the phenomena studied in the book."--Mathematical Reviews
Bernard Dwork is Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University. Giovanni Gerotto and Francis J. Sullivan are Associate Professors of Mathematics at the University of Padova.