Applications of Spectral Theory in the Material Sciences

Math 7390-2

Louisiana State University

Spring Semester, 2008


Place: Room 218 of Prescott Hall
Time: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 9:40 to 10:30

Instructor: Prof. Stephen Shipman
Office: Room 314 of Lockett Hall
Telephone: 225/578-1674
Email: shipman@math.lsu.edu
Office Hours: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 10:40--12:00 or by appointment

For a PDF version of the basic course information on this page, click here: 7390syl.pdf

Notices


Course Synopsis

The spectrum of an operator is one of the most fundamental objects that arises in problems of physics. It describes, for example, fundamental modes of vibration or fundamental shapes that are preserved through time in the dynamics of material structures. The aim of the course is a development of the role of Hilbert space in mathematical physics and especially the spectral decomposition of operators in Hilbert space, most of which are unbounded.

The syllabus is rather ambitious. I hope to delve substantially into the first four applications listed below and at least touch on the fifth. These applications represent only a tiny but important selection of problems in mathematical physics, and they will serve to build a foundation in the methods of Hilbert space and spectral analysis.

We will begin with the theory of self-adjoint operators in Hilbert space and learn the spectral theorem. We will not learn the proof of the spectral theorem, as this would require a course in itself, but rather learn what is means, how it is manifest in examples, and how it is useful in mathematical physics. We will treat several theorems in functional analysis in this manner, taking them for granted but then building rigorously upon them.

Applications.

Assignments

I will periodically assign problems that are designed to illuminate the theory we are discussing and that are motivated by applications. When we come to the subject of photonic crystals, each student will choose a topic that arises in the review article of P. Kuchment and present it to the class.

Evaluation

Evaluation of performance in the course is based on performance on the assignments and presentations.

Lecture Notes

Notes1.pdf
Notes2.pdf
Notes3.pdf
Notes4.pdf
Notes5.pdf
Notes6.pdf
Notes7.pdf (Problem Set 3)
Notes8.pdf
Notes9.pdf
Notes10.pdf
Notes11.pdf
Notes12.pdf (Solutions to Problem Sets 1 and 2)
Notes13.pdf (Solutions to Problem Set 3)
Notes14.pdf (not yet available)
Notes15.pdf
Notes16.pdf

Literature

  1. Excerpts on compact operators:
    Naylor and Sell
    Kress
    Reed and Simon
    Riesz and Sz.-Nagy
    Akhiezer and Glazman, Chapter V; see the link below.
  2. N. I. Akhiezer and I. M. Glazman, Theory of Linear Operators in Hilbert Space, Dover, 1993, replication of the edition of F. Ungar Publishing, NY, 1961, 1963.
  3. N. Dunford and J. T. Schwartz, Linear Operators: Part I General Theory, Part II Spectral Theory, Part III Spectral Operators, Wiley Classics Library, 1963.
  4. Gerald B. Folland, Introduction to Partial Differential Equations Chapter 0, Second Edition, Princeton University Press, 1995.
  5. Stephen H. Friedberg, Arnold J. Insel, and Lawrence E. Spence, Linear Algebra, Prentice Hall, 1979, 1989, 1997.
  6. P. D. Hislop and I. M. Sigal, Introduction to Spectral Theory with Applications to Schrödinger Operators, Springer series in Applied Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 113, 1996.
  7. K. Golden and G. Papanicolaou, Bounds for Effective Parameters of Heterogeneous Media by Analytic Continuation, Commun. Math. Phys., Vol. 80, 473-491 (1983).
  8. Stephen J. Gustafson and Israel Michael Sigal, Mathematical Concepts of Quantum Mechanics, Universitext series of Springer-Verlag, 2000.
  9. John D. Joannopoulos, Robert D. Meade, and Joshua N. Winn, Photonic Crystals: Molding the Flow of Light, Princeton University Press, 1995.
  10. Rainer Kress, Linear Integral Equations, Second Edition, Vol. 82 in Applied Mathematical Sciences, Springer Verlag, 1999.
  11. Peter Kuchment, The Mathematics of Photonic Crystals, Chapter 7 in the volume Mathematical Modeling in Optical Science of the SIAM series Frontiers in Applied Mathematics, 207-272 (2001).
  12. Arch W. Naylor and George R. Sell, Linear Operator Theory in Engineering and Science, Springer series on Applied Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 40, Springer Verlag, 1982.
  13. Michael Reed and Barry Simon, Methods of Modern Mathematics: Vol. I Functional Analysis, Vol. II Fourier Analysis and Self-Adjointness, Vol. III Scattering Theory, Vol. IV Analysis of Operators, Academic Press, 1980.
  14. Frigyes Riesz and Béla Sz.-Nagy, Functional Analysis, F. Ungar Publishing Co., New York, 1955 or Dover Publications, Inc., 1990.
  15. Walter Rudin, Real and Complex Analysis, Third edition, McGraw-Hill, 1987.
  16. Walter Rudin, Functional Analysis, Second Edition, McGraw-Hill, 1991.