Spivak Calculus

Calculus On Manifolds: A Modern Approach To Classical Theorems Of Advanced Calculus  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by Free butterfly at Oct. 23, 2020
Calculus On Manifolds: A Modern Approach To Classical Theorems Of Advanced Calculus

Calculus On Manifolds: A Modern Approach To Classical Theorems Of Advanced Calculus by Michael Spivak
English | May 7, 2019 | ISBN: 0367091909 | 162 pages | PDF | 20 Mb

Calculus (4th Edition)  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by Jeembo at Dec. 6, 2018
Calculus (4th Edition)

Calculus (4th Edition) by Michael Spivak
English | 2008 | ISBN: 0914098918 | 680 Pages | PDF | 102.9 MB

This book is a marvel for current (serious) math students, and for people who may one day find themselves teaching the subject, and want to choose best explanations for topics.

Calculus on manifolds  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by insetes at June 11, 2021
Calculus on manifolds

Calculus on manifolds By Michael Spivak
1995 | 158 Pages | ISBN: 0805390219 | DJVU | 2 MB

Differential Forms: A Heuristic Introduction  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by ChrisRedfield at Feb. 13, 2016
Differential Forms: A Heuristic Introduction

M. Schreiber - Differential Forms: A Heuristic Introduction
Published: 1984-06-11 | ISBN: 0387902872, 1461299411, 3540902872 | PDF | 146 pages | 2.75 MB

Differential Forms: A Heuristic Introduction  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by AvaxGenius at Jan. 31, 2025
Differential Forms: A Heuristic Introduction

Differential Forms: A Heuristic Introduction by M. Schreiber
English | PDF | 1977 | 158 Pages | ISBN : 0387902872 | 7.2 MB

A working knowledge of differential forms so strongly illuminates the calculus and its developments that it ought not be too long delayed in the curriculum. On the other hand, the systematic treatment of differential forms requires an apparatus of topology and algebra which is heavy for beginning undergraduates. Several texts on advanced calculus using differential forms have appeared in recent years. We may cite as representative of the variety of approaches the books of Fleming [2], (1) Nickerson-Spencer-Steenrod [3], and Spivak [6]. . Despite their accommodation to the innocence of their readers, these texts cannot lighten the burden of apparatus exactly because they offer a more or less full measure of the truth at some level of generality in a formally precise exposition. There. is consequently a gap between texts of this type and the traditional advanced calculus. Recently, on the occasion of offering a beginning course of advanced calculus, we undertook the expe- ment of attempting to present the technique of differential forms with minimal apparatus and very few prerequisites. These notes are the result of that experiment. Our exposition is intended to be heuristic and concrete. Roughly speaking, we take a differential form to be a multi-dimensional integrand, such a thing being subject to rules making change-of-variable calculations automatic. The domains of integration (manifolds) are explicitly given "surfaces" in Euclidean space. The differentiation of forms (exterior (1) Numbers in brackets refer to the Bibliography at the end.