Linked e-resources

Details

Intro
Preface
Acknowledgements
Notations
Contents
1 Introduction
1.1 Motivation and Background
1.2 An Overview of Recent Results
1.3 Discussion of the Methods and the Applications in These Notes
1.4 Summary of the Exposition
2 Double Operator Integrals
2.1 Double Operator Integrals in the Discrete Setting
2.2 Double Operator Integrals in the General Setting
2.3 Double Operator Integrals for Resolvent Comparable Operators
2.4 Continuity of Double Operator Integrals with Respect to the Operator Parameters
3 The Model Operator and Its Approximants

3.1 The Class of p-Relative Trace-Class Perturbations
3.2 Main Setting and Assumptions
4 The Spectral Shift Function
4.1 An Introduction to the Theory of the Spectral Shift Function
4.1.1 Perturbation Determinants
4.1.2 M. G. Krein' s Construction of the Spectral Shift Function
4.1.3 Properties of the Spectral Shift Function
4.2 More General Classes of Perturbations
4.2.1 Spectral Shift Function for Unitary Operators
4.2.2 Spectral Shift Function for Resolvent Comparable Operators
4.2.3 Invariance Principle

4.2.4 Spectral Shift Function for m-Resolvent Comparable Operators
4.3 Continuity of the Spectral Shift Function with Respect to the Operator Parameter
4.4 Representation of the Spectral Shift Function via a Regularised Perturbation Determinant
4.5 Spectral Shift Functions for the Pairs (A+,A-), (H2,H1)
5 Spectral Flow
5.1 Phillips' Definition of Spectral Flow and Analytic Formulas
5.1.1 The Variation of eta Formula
5.1.2 A Review of Analytic Formulas for Spectral Flow
5.2 The Relation Between the Spectral Shift Function and the Spectral Flow

5.3 Generalised Spectral Flow
6 The Principal Trace Formula and Its Applications
6.1 A Brief History of the Principal Trace Formula
6.2 Proving the Principal Trace Formula
6.3 A Generalised Pushnitski Formula
6.4 The Witten Index
6.4.1 Preliminaries
6.4.2 The Formula in Terms of the Spectral Shift Function
6.5 Cyclic Homology and Invariance
6.5.1 How the Witten Index Relates to This
6.5.2 Higher Schatten Classes
6.6 The Anomaly in Terms of the Spectral Shift Function
6.6.1 The Origin of the Notion of an `Anomaly'

Browse Subjects

Show more subjects...

Statistics

from
to
Export