
Random Matrices
American Mathematical Society (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 30. January 2020
Book
Hardback
508 pages
978-1-4704-5280-3 (ISBN)
Description
Random matrix theory has many roots and many branches in mathematics, statistics, physics, computer science, data science, numerical analysis, biology, ecology, engineering, and operations research. This book provides a snippet of this vast domain of study, with a particular focus on the notations of universality and integrability. Universality shows that many systems behave the same way in their large scale limit, while integrability provides a route to describe the nature of those universal limits. Many of the ten contributed chapters address these themes, while others touch on applications of tools and results from random matrix theory.
This book is appropriate for graduate students and researchers interested in learning techniques and results in random matrix theory from different perspectives and viewpoints. It also captures a moment in the evolution of the theory, when the previous decade brought major break-throughs, prompting exciting new directions of research.
This book is appropriate for graduate students and researchers interested in learning techniques and results in random matrix theory from different perspectives and viewpoints. It also captures a moment in the evolution of the theory, when the previous decade brought major break-throughs, prompting exciting new directions of research.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Providence
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 254 mm
Width: 178 mm
Weight
1100 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4704-5280-3 (9781470452803)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Alexei Borodin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA.
Ivan Corwin, Columbia University, New York, NY.
Alice Guionnet, CNRS, ENS Lyon, France.
Ivan Corwin, Columbia University, New York, NY.
Alice Guionnet, CNRS, ENS Lyon, France.
Content
P. Deift, Riemann-Hilbert problems
I. Dumitriu, The semicircle law and beyond: The shape of spectra of Wigner matrices
L. Erdos, The matrix Dyson equation and its applications for random matrices
Y. V. Fyodorov, Counting equilibria in complex systems via random matrices
D. Holcomb and B. Virag, A short introduction to operator limits of random matrices
J. Quastel and K. Matetski, From the totally asymmetric simple exclusion process to the KPZ
M. Rudelson, Delocalization of eigenvectors of random matrices
S. Serfaty, Microscopic description of log and Coulomb gases
D. Shlyakhtenko, Random matrices and free probability
T. Tao, Least singular value, circular law, and Lindeberg exchange.
I. Dumitriu, The semicircle law and beyond: The shape of spectra of Wigner matrices
L. Erdos, The matrix Dyson equation and its applications for random matrices
Y. V. Fyodorov, Counting equilibria in complex systems via random matrices
D. Holcomb and B. Virag, A short introduction to operator limits of random matrices
J. Quastel and K. Matetski, From the totally asymmetric simple exclusion process to the KPZ
M. Rudelson, Delocalization of eigenvectors of random matrices
S. Serfaty, Microscopic description of log and Coulomb gases
D. Shlyakhtenko, Random matrices and free probability
T. Tao, Least singular value, circular law, and Lindeberg exchange.