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Dorian Goldfeld

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 6 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1994-2019, suosituimpien joukossa Contributions To Contemporary Cryptography. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

6 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1994-2019.

Contributions To Contemporary Cryptography

Contributions To Contemporary Cryptography

Iris Anshel; Michael Anshel; Dorian Goldfeld

World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
2019
sidottu
This monograph deals with contributions to certain areas of contemporary cryptography based on recent developments in mathematics and computer science, including: (1) public-key cryptography based on combinatorial group theory, with an introduction to the exciting new area of braid group cryptography; (2) construction of one-way functions and pseudorandom number generators from a very general class of zeta functions, namely the feasible Selberg class. A focused survey of the underlying methods is presented together with careful computational constructions, allowing the reader to pursue independent investigations.
Automorphic Forms and L-Functions for the Group GL(n,R)

Automorphic Forms and L-Functions for the Group GL(n,R)

Dorian Goldfeld

Cambridge University Press
2015
pokkari
L-functions associated to automorphic forms encode all classical number theoretic information. They are akin to elementary particles in physics. This book provides an entirely self-contained introduction to the theory of L-functions in a style accessible to graduate students with a basic knowledge of classical analysis, complex variable theory, and algebra. Also within the volume are many new results not yet found in the literature. The exposition provides complete detailed proofs of results in an easy-to-read format using many examples and without the need to know and remember many complex definitions. The main themes of the book are first worked out for GL(2,R) and GL(3,R), and then for the general case of GL(n,R). In an appendix to the book, a set of Mathematica functions is presented, designed to allow the reader to explore the theory from a computational point of view.
Automorphic Representations and L-Functions for the General Linear Group: Volume 2

Automorphic Representations and L-Functions for the General Linear Group: Volume 2

Dorian Goldfeld; Joseph Hundley

Cambridge University Press
2011
sidottu
This graduate-level textbook provides an elementary exposition of the theory of automorphic representations and L-functions for the general linear group in an adelic setting. Definitions are kept to a minimum and repeated when reintroduced so that the book is accessible from any entry point, and with no prior knowledge of representation theory. The book includes concrete examples of global and local representations of GL(n), and presents their associated L-functions. In Volume 1, the theory is developed from first principles for GL(1), then carefully extended to GL(2) with complete detailed proofs of key theorems. Several proofs are presented for the first time, including Jacquet's simple and elegant proof of the tensor product theorem. In Volume 2, the higher rank situation of GL(n) is given a detailed treatment. Containing numerous exercises by Xander Faber, this book will motivate students and researchers to begin working in this fertile field of research.
Automorphic Representations and L-Functions for the General Linear Group: Volume 1

Automorphic Representations and L-Functions for the General Linear Group: Volume 1

Dorian Goldfeld; Joseph Hundley

Cambridge University Press
2011
sidottu
This graduate-level textbook provides an elementary exposition of the theory of automorphic representations and L-functions for the general linear group in an adelic setting. Definitions are kept to a minimum and repeated when reintroduced so that the book is accessible from any entry point, and with no prior knowledge of representation theory. The book includes concrete examples of global and local representations of GL(n), and presents their associated L-functions. In Volume 1, the theory is developed from first principles for GL(1), then carefully extended to GL(2) with complete detailed proofs of key theorems. Several proofs are presented for the first time, including Jacquet's simple and elegant proof of the tensor product theorem. In Volume 2, the higher rank situation of GL(n) is given a detailed treatment. Containing numerous exercises by Xander Faber, this book will motivate students and researchers to begin working in this fertile field of research.
Automorphic Forms and L-Functions for the Group GL(n,R)

Automorphic Forms and L-Functions for the Group GL(n,R)

Dorian Goldfeld

Cambridge University Press
2006
sidottu
L-functions associated to automorphic forms encode all classical number theoretic information. They are akin to elementary particles in physics. This book provides an entirely self-contained introduction to the theory of L-functions in a style accessible to graduate students with a basic knowledge of classical analysis, complex variable theory, and algebra. Also within the volume are many new results not yet found in the literature. The exposition provides complete detailed proofs of results in an easy-to-read format using many examples and without the need to know and remember many complex definitions. The main themes of the book are first worked out for GL(2,R) and GL(3,R), and then for the general case of GL(n,R). In an appendix to the book, a set of Mathematica functions is presented, designed to allow the reader to explore the theory from a computational point of view.
Explicit Formulas

Explicit Formulas

Jay Jorgenson; Serge Lang; Dorian Goldfeld

Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH Co. K
1994
nidottu
The theory of explicit formulas for regularized products and series forms a natural continuation of the analytic theory developed in LNM 1564. These explicit formulas can be used to describe the quantitative behavior of various objects in analytic number theory and spectral theory. The present book deals with other applications arising from Gaussian test functions, leading to theta inversion formulas and corresponding new types of zeta functions which are Gaussian transforms of theta series rather than Mellin transforms, and satisfy additive functional equations. Their wide range of applications includes the spectral theory of a broad class of manifolds and also the theory of zeta functions in number theory and representation theory. Here the hyperbolic 3-manifolds are given as a significant example.