🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

Substitutional Analysis

Product image 1

Substitutional Analysis

This classic monograph on representation theory and the symmetric group is suitable for advanced undergraduates and graduate students of mathematics. The Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society hailed Daniel Edwin Rutherford's treatment as "a long overdue account of Young's representation theory of the symmetric group," noting that "many of Young's complicated proofs have been simplified through a free use of mathematical induction."
Starting with an elementary overview of the theory of the symmetric group, the book proceeds to an examination of Young's formula, followed by an introduction to the fundamental notion of a standard diagram. Subsequent chapters present the passage to orthogonal and natural representations. No prior knowledge of the general theory of group characters is assumed, and the author deduces the necessary theory for the symmetric group. The final chapter illustrates the substitutional aspect of the theory, and a helpful appendix and bibliography conclude the text.

Reprint of the Hafner Publishing Co., New York, 1968 edition.
algebra;calculus;permutations;proofs;tableaux;substitutional equations;invariants;molenaar;matrix equations;hyper octahedral group;irreducible representation;advanced math education;group theory;youngs formula;orthogonal and natural representations;substitutional aspect of theory;mathematical theory;representation theory;symmetric group;undergraduate math;graduate math;complicated math made simple;mathematical induction
$5.23

Original: $14.95

-65%
Substitutional Analysis—

$14.95

$5.23

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

This classic monograph on representation theory and the symmetric group is suitable for advanced undergraduates and graduate students of mathematics. The Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society hailed Daniel Edwin Rutherford's treatment as "a long overdue account of Young's representation theory of the symmetric group," noting that "many of Young's complicated proofs have been simplified through a free use of mathematical induction."
Starting with an elementary overview of the theory of the symmetric group, the book proceeds to an examination of Young's formula, followed by an introduction to the fundamental notion of a standard diagram. Subsequent chapters present the passage to orthogonal and natural representations. No prior knowledge of the general theory of group characters is assumed, and the author deduces the necessary theory for the symmetric group. The final chapter illustrates the substitutional aspect of the theory, and a helpful appendix and bibliography conclude the text.

Reprint of the Hafner Publishing Co., New York, 1968 edition.
algebra;calculus;permutations;proofs;tableaux;substitutional equations;invariants;molenaar;matrix equations;hyper octahedral group;irreducible representation;advanced math education;group theory;youngs formula;orthogonal and natural representations;substitutional aspect of theory;mathematical theory;representation theory;symmetric group;undergraduate math;graduate math;complicated math made simple;mathematical induction
Substitutional Analysis | Dover Publications