Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin
An introduction to functional analysis for science and engineering (arxiv.org)
108 points by Anon84 10 hours ago | hide | past | favorite | 14 comments
 help



Seem reasonably concise, but I think Kreyzsig's Introduction to Functional Analysis with Applications fills the "gap" that this paper wants to fill. It's readable, has applications, exercises, and is more complete.

From my undergrad engineering math I understand some context here but am getting confused after a decade of programming. Words like "compact" and "closure" [0] probably do not translate directly to the mathematics space from software development - but don't really expect them to...

Thanks for the post it's a good kick in the rear to explore conceptually what eigenvalues/vectors are again!

[0]: from looking up "compact operator" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_operator


That sure is one compact document. Pun intended. The document is very readable too.

Does anyone know any applied functional analysis book? I have strong linear algebra foundation, but no real analysis.

if you take the spectral theorem, for example, there is a direct connection between linear algebra and functional analysis, basically it's linear algebra in infinite dimensions

(2019). No exercises.

Genuine question: does the writing tool matter at all here if the exposition is clear and mathematically correct? I’ve seen great notes written in Word, LaTeX, and even slides—quality seems independent of format.

I would say it's not statistically independent. See https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=304 item #1. So we get to add another exception, which is fine.

Interesting!

both no in principle, and when you're used to reading LaTeX, word is ugly. It's a milder form of how if these notes were handwritten it wouldn't matter, but it would also be less appealing than them being typeset well.

Not LaTeX...

DABM writes everything in MS Word.

So... ?

It's "bad form" to write STEM papers in Word. Which is stupid, of course, as every major publisher offers both Word and LaTeX templates. I wish they'd offer Typst too.



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: