INTRODUCTION TO DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY
(suitable for scientists and engineers)
Spring 2007 MATH 481
MWF, 2pm Altgeld
Hall, rm 143
WWW:
http://www.math.uiuc.edu/~kapovich/481-07/481-07.html
Instructor:
Ilya Kapovich
Telephone:
265-0633
e-mail: kapovich@math.uiuc.edu. (Preferred
method
of reaching me!)
Office location: Altgeld Hall, room 365
Office hours: Tue, Thur
9:30am-11am (and at other times by appointment)
Text:
Required: The Geometry of Physics, An Introduction,
T. Frankel,
Cambridge U.P. 1997 (paperback)
Recommended: Tensor Analysis on Manifolds, R.
Bishop and S. Goldberg,
Dover (paperback)
Prerequisites:
Multivariable calculus
Brief course description.
The basic tools of differential geometry will be introduced at the
undergraduate level, by focusing on examples. This is a good first
course for those interested in, or curious about, modern differential
geometry, and in applying differential geometric methods to other
areas. Graduate students may take for 4 hours of credit, by completing
additional problem sets. Note
that the course description differs somewhat form the one given in the
course catalogue (that is somewhat out of date). The present
course has been developed by Professor Stephanie Alexander over the
period of several last years.
- Manifolds: configuration spaces, differentiable manifolds,
tangent spaces,
tangent bundles, orientability.
- Calculus on manifolds: Vector fields, flows, tensor fields.
- Differential forms and exterior calculus.
- Integration theory: Generalized Stokes theorem, de Rham
cohomology.
- Riemannian geometry: Riemannian metrics, geodesics.
Some course materials:
Grading
system:
- Weekly worksheet assignments [1/5 of the
grade], two one-hour tests [1/5 of the grade for each test], final exam
[2/5 of the grade]
- Final Exam: 1:30-4:30 PM, Wednesday, May 9