Review of the hardback: '… can be warmly recommended to anyone interested in the fascinating area of computational number theory.' EMS Newsletter

Number theory is one of the oldest and most appealing areas of mathematics. Computation has always played a role in number theory, a role which has increased dramatically in the last 20 or 30 years, both because of the advent of modern computers, and because of the discovery of surprising and powerful algorithms. As a consequence, algorithmic number theory has gradually emerged as an important and distinct field with connections to computer science and cryptography as well as other areas of mathematics. This text provides a comprehensive introduction to algorithmic number theory for beginning graduate students, written by the leading experts in the field. It includes several articles that cover the essential topics in this area, and in addition, there are contributions pointing in broader directions, including cryptography, computational class field theory, zeta functions and L-series, discrete logarithm algorithms, and quantum computing.
Les mer
1. Solving Pell's equation Hendrik Lenstra; 2. Basic algorithms in number theory Joe Buhler and Stan Wagon; 3. Elliptic curves Bjorn Poonen; 4. The arithmetic of number rings Peter Stevenhagen; 5. Fast multiplication and applications Dan Bernstein; 6. Primality testing Rene Schoof; 7. Smooth numbers: computational number theory and beyond Andrew Granville; 8. Smooth numbers and the quadratic sieve Carl Pomerance; 9. The number field sieve Peter Stevenhagen; 10. Elementary thoughts on discrete logarithms Carl Pomerance; 11. The impact of the number field sieve on the discrete logarithm problem in finite fields Oliver Schirokauer; 12. Lattices Hendrik Lenstra; 13. Reducing lattices to find small-height values of univariate polynomials Dan Bernstein; 14. Protecting communications against forgery Dan Bernstein; 15. Computing Arakelov class groups Rene Schoof; 16. Computational class field theory Henri Cohen and Peter Stevenhagen; 17. Zeta functions over finite fields Daqing Wan; 18. Counting points on varieties over finite fields Alan Lauder and Daqing Wan; 19. How to get your hands on modular forms using modular symbols William Stein; 20. Congruent number problems in dimension one and two Jaap Top and Noriko Yui.
Les mer
An introduction to number theory for beginning graduate students with articles by the leading experts in the field.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780521808545
Publisert
2008-10-20
Utgiver
Vendor
Cambridge University Press
Vekt
1030 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
37 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
664

Biographical note

Joe Buhler received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1977, writing a thesis on algebraic number theory. He has taught at the Pennsylvania State Universtiy, Harvard University, and Reed College, and served as the Deputy Director at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley, California. His research interests include number theory, combinatorics, algebra, and algorithmic aspects of these fields. In addition to research papers and monographs he has written popular articles on mathematics, and the mathematics of juggling. He has served on various committees of the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematics Association of America, is an editor for several journals, and has organized several major conferences in number theory. Peter Stevenhagen obtained his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley in 1988. He was charge de recherche in the CNRS in Besancon, France before forming a small number theory group at the University of Amsterdam. Since 1993, he is the organizer of the biweekly Intercity Number Theory Seminar, the Dutch national platform for research in number theory. In 2000 he was appointed at Leiden University, the oldest university in the Netherlands, which was founded in 1575. Besides his research papers, his bibliography counts various papers in number theory of popularizing and historical nature. He is a member of the board of the Dutch Mathematical Society, the Wiskundig Genootschap.