Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introductory
- 2 The Weierstrass functions
- 3 Invariants and the modular function
- 4 The Jacobi functions
- 5 The Riemann surface and the integral of the first kind
- 6 Quasi-elliptic functions and integrals of the second and third kinds
- 7 The ternary elliptic functions
- 8 Transformations and modular relations
- 9 Trigonometric expansions
- 10 The theta functions
- 11 Elliptic curves
- 12 The Plane cubic
- 13 Elliptic quartic curves
- Historical Note
- Bibliography
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introductory
- 2 The Weierstrass functions
- 3 Invariants and the modular function
- 4 The Jacobi functions
- 5 The Riemann surface and the integral of the first kind
- 6 Quasi-elliptic functions and integrals of the second and third kinds
- 7 The ternary elliptic functions
- 8 Transformations and modular relations
- 9 Trigonometric expansions
- 10 The theta functions
- 11 Elliptic curves
- 12 The Plane cubic
- 13 Elliptic quartic curves
- Historical Note
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The lectures on which the following notes are based were given in various forms in University College, London, from about 1964 to 1969. Generally they were an optional undergraduate course, containing the substance of Chapters 1-6, and part of Chapter 8. Once or twice they were given to graduate students in geometry, and then included also the bulk of Chapters 9-13. Chapter 7, with the part of Chapter 11 which depends on this, and the cubic transformations in Chapter 8, never figured in the course, but it seemed to me very desirable to add them to the published notes. There is of course much more that I would have liked to include (such as transformations at least of order 5, some study of the connexion between modular relations and the subgroups of finite index in the modular group, a general examination of rectification problems, and the parametrisation of confocal quadrics and of the tetrahedroid and wave surfaces); but a limit of length is laid down for this series of publications, which I fear I have already strained to the utmost.
In my treatment of elliptic functions I have tried above all to present a unified view of the subject as a whole, developing naturally out of the Weierstrass function; and to give the essential rudiments of every aspect of the subject, while unable to enter in very great detail into any one of these. In particular I have been concerned to emphasize the dependence of the properties of the functions on the shape of the lattice; it is for this reason that the modular function is introduced at such an early stage, and that equal prominence is given throughout (except in the context of the Jacobi functions) to the rhombic and the rectangular lattices.
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- Elliptic Functions and Elliptic Curves , pp. iv - viPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1973