Difference between revisions of "Analysis"

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'''Analysis''' is the branch of [[mathematics]] concerned particularly with the concepts of function and limit.  The subject has its origins in the quest to put [[calculus]] on a rigorous footing, and it is to this end that concepts like [[continuous]] and [[limit]] were first defined rigorously by [[Karl Weierstrass]] and [[Augustin-Louis Cauchy]].  Weierstrass gave the now-familiar "epsilon-delta" definition of a limit and worked to elaborate its basic properties.  He demonstrated, for example, that there exist functions which are continuous functions which are not differentiable at any point.  The possibility of such pathological functions could not have been imagined by [[Isaac Newton]] and others who had worked on calculus with less formal underpinnings.
 
'''Analysis''' is the branch of [[mathematics]] concerned particularly with the concepts of function and limit.  The subject has its origins in the quest to put [[calculus]] on a rigorous footing, and it is to this end that concepts like [[continuous]] and [[limit]] were first defined rigorously by [[Karl Weierstrass]] and [[Augustin-Louis Cauchy]].  Weierstrass gave the now-familiar "epsilon-delta" definition of a limit and worked to elaborate its basic properties.  He demonstrated, for example, that there exist functions which are continuous functions which are not differentiable at any point.  The possibility of such pathological functions could not have been imagined by [[Isaac Newton]] and others who had worked on calculus with less formal underpinnings.
  
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The New American Desk Encyclopedia, Penguin Group, 1989
 
The New American Desk Encyclopedia, Penguin Group, 1989
  
[[Category: Mathematics]]
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[[Category:Mathematics]]

Revision as of 19:50, September 17, 2011

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Analysis is the branch of mathematics concerned particularly with the concepts of function and limit. The subject has its origins in the quest to put calculus on a rigorous footing, and it is to this end that concepts like continuous and limit were first defined rigorously by Karl Weierstrass and Augustin-Louis Cauchy. Weierstrass gave the now-familiar "epsilon-delta" definition of a limit and worked to elaborate its basic properties. He demonstrated, for example, that there exist functions which are continuous functions which are not differentiable at any point. The possibility of such pathological functions could not have been imagined by Isaac Newton and others who had worked on calculus with less formal underpinnings.

Since its origins in the calculus, analysis has expanded into a vast subject with applications to every other branch of mathematics. It now includes other familiar topics like Riemann integration and Lebesgue integration, picking up entire fields like measure theory along the way. Analysis also plays an important role in applied mathematics, where it provides the machinery which make methods like Fourier analysis possible, and many deep results about solutions of differential equations may be proved by analytic methods. Besides these well-known subjects, there are numerous other subfields of analysis dealing with more specialized subjects:

In addition to these branches, there are other less familiar branches of analysis, including p-adic and non-standard analysis.

Sources

The New American Desk Encyclopedia, Penguin Group, 1989