Geometry of Subanalytic and Semialgebraic Sets
Real analytic sets in Euclidean space (Le. , sets defined locally at each point of Euclidean space by the vanishing of an analytic function) were first investigated in the 1950's by H. Cartan [Car], H. Whitney [WI-3], F. Bruhat [W-B] and others. Their approach was to derive information about real analytic sets from properties of their complexifications. After some basic geometrical and topological facts were established, however, the study of real analytic sets stagnated. This contrasted the rapid development of complex analytic geometry which followed the groundbreaking work of the early 1950's. Certain pathologies in the real case contributed to this failure to progress. For example, the closure of -or the connected components of-a constructible set (Le. , a locally finite union of differ­ ences of real analytic sets) need not be constructible (e. g. , R - {O} and 3 2 2 { (x, y, z) E R : x = zy2, x + y2 -=I- O}, respectively). Responding to this in the 1960's, R. Thorn [Thl], S. Lojasiewicz [LI,2] and others undertook the study of a larger class of sets, the semianalytic sets, which are the sets defined locally at each point of Euclidean space by a finite number of ana­ lytic function equalities and inequalities. They established that semianalytic sets admit Whitney stratifications and triangulations, and using these tools they clarified the local topological structure of these sets. For example, they showed that the closure and the connected components of a semianalytic set are semianalytic.
1100758003
Geometry of Subanalytic and Semialgebraic Sets
Real analytic sets in Euclidean space (Le. , sets defined locally at each point of Euclidean space by the vanishing of an analytic function) were first investigated in the 1950's by H. Cartan [Car], H. Whitney [WI-3], F. Bruhat [W-B] and others. Their approach was to derive information about real analytic sets from properties of their complexifications. After some basic geometrical and topological facts were established, however, the study of real analytic sets stagnated. This contrasted the rapid development of complex analytic geometry which followed the groundbreaking work of the early 1950's. Certain pathologies in the real case contributed to this failure to progress. For example, the closure of -or the connected components of-a constructible set (Le. , a locally finite union of differ­ ences of real analytic sets) need not be constructible (e. g. , R - {O} and 3 2 2 { (x, y, z) E R : x = zy2, x + y2 -=I- O}, respectively). Responding to this in the 1960's, R. Thorn [Thl], S. Lojasiewicz [LI,2] and others undertook the study of a larger class of sets, the semianalytic sets, which are the sets defined locally at each point of Euclidean space by a finite number of ana­ lytic function equalities and inequalities. They established that semianalytic sets admit Whitney stratifications and triangulations, and using these tools they clarified the local topological structure of these sets. For example, they showed that the closure and the connected components of a semianalytic set are semianalytic.
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Geometry of Subanalytic and Semialgebraic Sets

Geometry of Subanalytic and Semialgebraic Sets

by Masahiro Shiota
Geometry of Subanalytic and Semialgebraic Sets

Geometry of Subanalytic and Semialgebraic Sets

by Masahiro Shiota

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1997)

$89.99 
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Overview

Real analytic sets in Euclidean space (Le. , sets defined locally at each point of Euclidean space by the vanishing of an analytic function) were first investigated in the 1950's by H. Cartan [Car], H. Whitney [WI-3], F. Bruhat [W-B] and others. Their approach was to derive information about real analytic sets from properties of their complexifications. After some basic geometrical and topological facts were established, however, the study of real analytic sets stagnated. This contrasted the rapid development of complex analytic geometry which followed the groundbreaking work of the early 1950's. Certain pathologies in the real case contributed to this failure to progress. For example, the closure of -or the connected components of-a constructible set (Le. , a locally finite union of differ­ ences of real analytic sets) need not be constructible (e. g. , R - {O} and 3 2 2 { (x, y, z) E R : x = zy2, x + y2 -=I- O}, respectively). Responding to this in the 1960's, R. Thorn [Thl], S. Lojasiewicz [LI,2] and others undertook the study of a larger class of sets, the semianalytic sets, which are the sets defined locally at each point of Euclidean space by a finite number of ana­ lytic function equalities and inequalities. They established that semianalytic sets admit Whitney stratifications and triangulations, and using these tools they clarified the local topological structure of these sets. For example, they showed that the closure and the connected components of a semianalytic set are semianalytic.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781461273783
Publisher: Birkhäuser Boston
Publication date: 10/13/2012
Series: Progress in Mathematics , #150
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1997
Pages: 434
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.04(d)

Table of Contents

I. Preliminaries.- §1.1. Whitney stratifications.- §1.2. Subanalytic sets and semialgebraic sets.- §1.3. PL topology and C? triangulations.- II. X-Sets.- §11.1. X-sets.- §11.2. Triangulations of X-sets.- §11.3. Triangulations of X functions.- §11.4. Triangulations of semialgebraic and X0 sets and functions.- §11.5. Cr X-manifolds.- §11.6. X-triviality of X-maps.- §11.7. X-singularity theory.- III. Hauptvermutung For Polyhedra.- §III.1. Certain conditions for two polyhedra to be PL homeomorphic.- §III.2. Proofs of Theorems III.1.1 and III.1.2.- IV. Triangulations of X-Maps.- §IV.l. Conditions for X-maps to be triangulable.- §IV.2. Proofs of Theorems IV.1.1, IV.1.2, IV.1.2? and IV.1.2?.- §IV.3. Local and global X-triangulations and uniqueness.- §IV.4. Proofs of Theorems IV.1.10, IV.1.13 and IV.1.13?.- V. D-Sets.- §V.1. Case where any D-set is locally semilinear.- §V.2. Case where there exists a D-set which is not locally semilinear.- List of Notation.
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