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Introduction to Analytic Number Theory - (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics) 5th Edition by Tom M Apostol (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- This introductory textbook is designed to teach undergraduates the basic ideas and techniques of number theory, with special consideration to the principles of analytic number theory.
- Author(s): Tom M Apostol
- 340 Pages
- Mathematics, Number Theory
- Series Name: Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics
Description
Book Synopsis
This introductory textbook is designed to teach undergraduates the basic ideas and techniques of number theory, with special consideration to the principles of analytic number theory. Among the strong points of the book are its clarity of exposition and a collection of exercises at the end of each chapter. The first ten chapters, with the exception of one section, are accessible to anyone with knowledge of elementary calculus; the last four chapters require some knowledge of complex function theory including complex integration and residue calculus.
Review Quotes
From the reviews:
T.M. Apostol
Introduction to Analytic Number Theory
"This book is the first volume of a two-volume textbook for undergraduates and is indeed the crystallization of a course offered by the author at the California Institute of Technology to undergraduates without any previous knowledge of number theory. For this reason, the book starts with the most elementary properties of the natural integers. Nevertheless, the text succeeds in presenting an enormous amount of material in little more than 300 pages. The presentation is invariably lucid and the book is a real pleasure to read."
--MATHEMATICAL REVIEWS
"After reading Introduction to Analytic Number Theory one is left with the impression that the author, Tom M. Apostal, has pulled off some magic trick. ... I must admit that I love this book. The selection of topics is excellent, the exposition is fluid, the proofs are clear and nicely structured, and every chapter contains itsown set of ... exercises. ... this book is very readable and approachable, and it would work very nicely as a text for a second course in number theory." (Álvaro Lozano-Robledo, The Mathematical Association of America, December, 2011)