1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910151936503321

Autore

Buyalo Sergei

Titolo

Elements of Asymptotic Geometry [[electronic resource] /] / Sergei Buyalo, Viktor Schroeder

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Zuerich, Switzerland, : European Mathematical Society Publishing House, 2007

ISBN

3-03719-536-3

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (212 pages)

Collana

EMS Monographs in Mathematics (EMM) ; , 2523-5192

Classificazione

51-xx53-xx

Soggetti

Differential & Riemannian geometry

Geometry

Differential geometry

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Sommario/riassunto

Asymptotic geometry is the study of metric spaces from a large scale point of view, where the local geometry does not come into play. An important class of model spaces are the hyperbolic spaces (in the sense of Gromov), for which the asymptotic geometry is nicely encoded in the boundary at infinity.   In the first part of this book, in analogy with the  concepts of classical hyperbolic geometry, the authors provide a systematic    account of the basic theory  of Gromov hyperbolic spaces. These spaces have been studied extensively  in the last twenty years, and have found applications in group theory,  geometric topology, Kleinian groups, as well as dynamics and rigidity theory.  In the second part of the book, various  aspects of the asymptotic geometry of arbitrary metric spaces are considered.  It turns out that the boundary at infinity approach is not appropriate in the general case,  but dimension theory proves useful for finding interesting results and applications.   The text leads concisely to some central aspects of the theory. Each chapter concludes with a separate section containing supplementary results and bibliographical notes. Here the theory is also illustrated with numerous examples as well as relations to the neighboring fields of comparison geometry and geometric group theory.   The book is based on lectures the authors presented at the



Steklov Institute in St. Petersburg and the University of Zurich. It addressed to graduate students and researchers working in geometry, topology, and geometric group theory.