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Functional Identities / by Matej Brešar, Mikhail A. Chebotar, Wallace S. Martindale
(Frontiers in Mathematics. ISSN:16608054)

Edition 1st ed. 2007.
Publisher (Basel : Birkhäuser Basel : Imprint: Birkhäuser)
Year 2007
Language English
Size XII, 272 p : online resource
Authors *Brešar, Matej author
Chebotar, Mikhail A author
Martindale, Wallace S author
SpringerLink (Online service)
Subjects LCSH:Algebra
LCSH:Associative rings
LCSH:Associative algebras
LCSH:Functional analysis
FREE:Algebra
FREE:Associative Rings and Algebras
FREE:Functional Analysis
Notes An Introductory Course -- What is a Functional Identity? -- The Strong Degree and the FI-Degree -- The General Theory -- Constructing d-Free Sets -- Functional Identities on d-Free Sets -- Functional Identities in (Semi)prime Rings -- Applications -- Lie Maps and Related Topics -- Linear Preserver Problems -- Further Applications to Lie Algebras
The theory of functional identities (FIs) is a relatively new one - the first results were published at the beginning of the 1990s, and this is the first book on this subject. An FI can be informally described as an identical relation involving arbitrary elements in an associative ring together with arbitrary (unknown) functions. The goal of the general FI theory is to describe these functions, or, when this is not possible, to describe the structure of the ring admitting the FI in question. This abstract theory has turned out to be a powerful tool for solving a variety of problems in ring theory, Lie algebras, Jordan algebras, linear algebra, and operator theory. The book is divided into three parts. Part I is an introductory one. Part II is the core of the book. It gives a full account of the general FI theory, which is based on the concept of a d-free set; various constructions and concrete examples of d-free sets are given, and FI’s on d-free sets are thoroughly studied. Part III deals with applications. Its main purpose is to demonstrate how one can find FI’s when considering different problems, and then effectively use the general theory exposed in Part II. Perhaps the most illuminating example of the applicability are solutions of long-standing Herstein’s conjectures on Lie homomorphisms and Lie derivations - in the proofs practically the entire FI theory is used
HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7643-7796-0
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Springer eBooks 9783764377960
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Material Type E-Book
Classification LCC:QA150-272
DC23:512
ID 4000116677
ISBN 9783764377960

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