Publicado por American Mathematical Society; Providence, R.I.
Librería: Berry Hill Book Shop, Deansboro, NY, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 13,33
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. 1934, Very Good Plus/no dj, tall octavo, 184pp., navy blue cloth hardcover, binding tight, owner's inked name on endpaper & perforated stamp bottom of title page o/w text unmarked, volume XIX in AMS Colloquium Publications.
Publicado por American Mathematical Society, 1934
ISBN 10: 0821810197 ISBN 13: 9780821810194
Idioma: Inglés
Librería: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Reino Unido
EUR 71,05
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New. In.
Publicado por American Mathematical Society, 1934
Librería: Moe's Books, Berkeley, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 26,67
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Añadir al carritoHard cover. Condición: Good. No jacket. Fifth printing from 1964. Spine is sunned and lightly shaken. Cover is slightly worn. Front paste-down end leaf has previous owner's signature. Inside is tanned, but clean and unmarked.
Publicado por american mathematical society, 1954
Librería: Bingo Books 2, Vancouver, WA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 37,78
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. hardback book in very good condition.
Publicado por American Mathematical Society Jul 1934, 1934
ISBN 10: 0821810197 ISBN 13: 9780821810194
Idioma: Inglés
Librería: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Alemania
EUR 74,72
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware - With the aid of Fourier-Mellin transforms as a tool in analysis, this book presents such diverse analytic questions as those of quasi-analytic functions, Mercer's theorem on summability, Milne's integral equation of radiative equilibrium, and the theorems of Munz and Szasz concerning the closure of sets of powers of an argument.
Publicado por American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 1964
Librería: Warwick Books, member IOBA, South Pasadena, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
EUR 31,11
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Fine. Fifth printing. Hardcover in blue cloth boards. No dust jacket. Fifth printing from 1964, of book first published in 1934. Fine, unworn and unmarked condition, inside and out. Solid binding. From the library of noted California mathematician Charles Greenhall, with his inked ownership name on front endpage. Tall 8vo. 184 pp. including index.
Publicado por American Mathematical Society:, 1934
Librería: PASCALE'S BOOKS, NORTH READING, MA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 53,33
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Añadir al carritoHard Cover. Condición: Very Good. 184 pages. "This book represents a definitive statement of the results obtained by the late Mr. R.E.A.C. Paley and myself during Mr. Paly's year as Rockfeller Fellow at MIT (1932-1933). Mr. Paley was killed on April 7 in a skiing accident in the Canadian Rockies, during a short vacation which he had taken from our joint work. Most of our work went through several versions, in writing which both author's took part. A part of our work was published in the form of a series of notes in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. This work covered a great variety of topics, but was unified by the central idea of the application of the Fourier transform in the complex domain. " VERY GOOD HARDCOVER. Size: 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall.
Publicado por New York: American Mathematical Society, 1934., 1934
Librería: Ted Kottler, Bookseller, Redondo Beach, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 84,45
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. viii, 183, [1=ads] pp; portrait. Original cloth, large 8vo. Extremities rubbed. Signature of former owner on front flyleaf. Else Very Good. 'Norbert Wiener was proving important results in areas of interest to Paley so he applied for a Rockefeller International Research Fellowship to allow him to travel to the United States to collaborate with him at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Norbert Wiener wrote in [2]: 'Soon after his arrival in America, however, certain studies of lacunary series which Paley had already begun suggested a new attack on the theory of interpolation and allied trigonometrical problems. These results led successively to the study of quasi-analytic functions, of entire functions of order one-half, and of many related questions.' For a young man of 26, Paley had collaborated with a remarkable group of mathematicians. In addition to Littlewood, Zygmund and Norbert Wiener, he had also collaborated with Pólya. As Norbert Wiener wrote in [2]: 'Possessed of an extraordinary capacity for making friends and for scientific collaboration, Paley believed that the inspiration of continual interchange of ideas stimulates each collaborator to accomplish more than he would alone.' Already with a reputation remarkable for one so young, Paley stood on the brink of becoming one of the very first rank of research mathematicians. However, in 1933 while working in the United States, he went to Canada for a skiing holiday. While skiing near Banff he was killed by avalanche [1]: '. . . at Deception Pass, Fossil Mountain in the Rockies. Park wardens and a member of the Canadian Mountain police recovered the body, which has been brought to Banff. Mr Paley was skiing alone at an altitude of 9,600 ft, but his death was witnessed by companions lower down the mountainside.' Had he lived to continue his mathematical work, one feels sure that his name would today be as well known as the mathematicians with whom he collaborated. Norbert Wiener gave the Colloquium Lectures of the American Mathematical Society in 1934 and spoke on Paley's work. Paley was to have been a Colloquium Lecturer himself. Norbert Wiener wrote in [2]: '. . . he was already recognised as the ablest of the group of young English mathematicians who have been inspired by the genius of G H Hardy and J E Littlewood. In a group notable for its brilliant technique, no one had developed this technique to a higher degree than Paley. Nevertheless he should not be though of primarily as a technician, for with this ability he combined creative power of the first order. As he himself was wont to say, technique without 'rugger tactics' will not get one far, and these rugger tactics he practised to a degree that was characteristic of his forthright and vigorous nature' ' ( J J O'Connor and E F Robertson, Paley entry at MacTutor History of Mathematics Web site; sources are N Wiener, 'R E A C Paley - in memoriam', Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 39 (7) (1933), 476, and an obituary, The Times). American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications Volume XIX [19] [Nineteen].
Publicado por New York: American Mathematical Society, 1934., 1934
Librería: Ted Kottler, Bookseller, Redondo Beach, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 111,11
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Near Fine. No Jacket. 1st Edition. FIRST EDITION. viii, 183, [1=ads] pp; portrait. Original cloth, large 8vo. Near Fine. 'Norbert Wiener was proving important results in areas of interest to Paley so he applied for a Rockefeller International Research Fellowship to allow him to travel to the United States to collaborate with him at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Norbert Wiener wrote in [2]: 'Soon after his arrival in America, however, certain studies of lacunary series which Paley had already begun suggested a new attack on the theory of interpolation and allied trigonometrical problems. These results led successively to the study of quasi-analytic functions, of entire functions of order one-half, and of many related questions.' For a young man of 26, Paley had collaborated with a remarkable group of mathematicians. In addition to Littlewood, Zygmund and Norbert Wiener, he had also collaborated with Pólya. As Norbert Wiener wrote in [2]: 'Possessed of an extraordinary capacity for making friends and for scientific collaboration, Paley believed that the inspiration of continual interchange of ideas stimulates each collaborator to accomplish more than he would alone.' Already with a reputation remarkable for one so young, Paley stood on the brink of becoming one of the very first rank of research mathematicians. However, in 1933 while working in the United States, he went to Canada for a skiing holiday. While skiing near Banff he was killed by avalanche [1]: '. . . at Deception Pass, Fossil Mountain in the Rockies. Park wardens and a member of the Canadian Mountain police recovered the body, which has been brought to Banff. Mr Paley was skiing alone at an altitude of 9,600 ft, but his death was witnessed by companions lower down the mountainside.' Had he lived to continue his mathematical work, one feels sure that his name would today be as well known as the mathematicians with whom he collaborated. Norbert Wiener gave the Colloquium Lectures of the American Mathematical Society in 1934 and spoke on Paley's work. Paley was to have been a Colloquium Lecturer himself. Norbert Wiener wrote in [2]: '. . . he was already recognised as the ablest of the group of young English mathematicians who have been inspired by the genius of G H Hardy and J E Littlewood. In a group notable for its brilliant technique, no one had developed this technique to a higher degree than Paley. Nevertheless he should not be though of primarily as a technician, for with this ability he combined creative power of the first order. As he himself was wont to say, technique without 'rugger tactics' will not get one far, and these rugger tactics he practised to a degree that was characteristic of his forthright and vigorous nature' ' (J J O'Connor and E F Robertson, Paley entry at MacTutor History of Mathematics Web site; sources are N Wiener, 'R E A C Paley - in memoriam', Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 39 (7) (1933), 476, and an obituary, The Times).
Publicado por New York: Amer. Math. Soc. 1934, 1934
Librería: Antiquarian Scientist, The, Westhampton, MA, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: SNEAB
Original o primera edición
EUR 164,45
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. 1st Edition. FIRST EDITION. 8 vo. Orig. cloth. viii, 184, (1, pub. ad) pp. Portrait of Paley. A very good copy. The M.I.T. mathematician, Norbert Wiener (1894-1964), well known for his pioneering work in communication theory, contributed substantially to the mathematics of harmonic analysis, Fourier transforms, and Tauberian theorems. The present publication, Wiener's second monograph - preceded by 'The Fourier integral and certain of its applications', 1933 - treats Fourier transforms in collaboration with his student R.E. Paley (1907-33), who was killed in a skiing accident while a Rockefeller Fellow at M.I.T.