Introduction to Groups, Groupoids and Their Representations

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A01=Alberto Ibort
A01=Miguel A. Rodriguez
Abelian Group
advanced mathematics textbook
algebraic topology
Author_Alberto Ibort
Author_Miguel A. Rodriguez
categorical representation theory
category theory
Category=PBG
combinatorics
Complex Separable Hilbert Spaces
Composition Law
Conjugacy Class
Direct Sum
Disjoint Union
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Finite Dimensional Algebras
Finite Dimensional Linear Space
Finite Dimensional Representations
Finite Group
Finite Groupoids
finite groups
functor theory
Group Homomorphisms
group theory
Groupoid Algebra
incomplete symmetries
Indecomposable Representations
Invariant Subspace
Irreducible Representation
Isotropy Group
Left Regular Representation
Linear Representations
Linear Space
mathematical structures
Nilpotent Ideal
Normal Subgroup
quantum systems applications
Schur's Lemmas
Schur’s Lemmas
Short Exact Sequence
symmetry analysis
Tensor Product
topology

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138035867
  • Weight: 725g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book offers an introduction to the theory of groupoids and their representations encompassing the standard theory of groups. Using a categorical language, developed from simple examples, the theory of finite groupoids is shown to knit neatly with that of groups and their structure as well as that of their representations is described. The book comprises numerous examples and applications, including well-known games and puzzles, databases and physics applications. Key concepts have been presented using only basic notions so that it can be used both by students and researchers interested in the subject.

Category theory is the natural language that is being used to develop the theory of groupoids. However, categorical presentations of mathematical subjects tend to become highly abstract very fast and out of reach of many potential users. To avoid this, foundations of the theory, starting with simple examples, have been developed and used to study the structure of finite groups and groupoids. The appropriate language and notions from category theory have been developed for students of mathematics and theoretical physics. The book presents the theory on the same level as the ordinary and elementary theories of finite groups and their representations, and provides a unified picture of the same. The structure of the algebra of finite groupoids is analysed, along with the classical theory of characters of their representations.

Unnecessary complications in the formal presentation of the subject are avoided. The book offers an introduction to the language of category theory in the concrete setting of finite sets. It also shows how this perspective provides a common ground for various problems and applications, ranging from combinatorics, the topology of graphs, structure of databases and quantum physics.

Alberto Ibort is full professor of Applied Mathematics in the Department of Mathematics of the Universidad Carlos III of Madrid, Spain and member of the Mathematical Institute, ICMAT, Madrid, Spain. He has been visiting professor and Fulbright Scholar at the University of California at Berkeley, USA, postdoc at the Université de Paris VI, France and the Niels Bohr Institute, Denmark, and professor of Theoretical Physics at the Universidad Complutense of Madrid. His research includes several areas of Mathematics and Mathematical Physics: Functional Analysis, Differential Geometry and more recently algebraic structures on Physics and Engineering, mainly control theory.

Miguel A. Rodríguez is full professor in the Department of Theoretical Physics of Universidad Complutense of Madrid, Spain. His teaching is mainly related to courses on Mathematics applied to Physics, in particular group theory. He has been visiting professor at Université de Montréal, Canada, University of California at Los Angeles, USA, and Università di Roma Tre, Italy. His research field includes several areas of Mathematical Physics: Integrable Systems, Group Theory, and Difference Equations.

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