Book on Symplectic Geometry - MathOverflow most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-05-22T10:38:46Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/39056 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/39056/book-on-symplectic-geometry Book on Symplectic Geometry Debangshu Mukherjee 2010-09-17T04:58:18Z 2010-09-17T22:43:23Z <p>Can someone please tell me some introductory book on symplectic geometry? I have no prior idea of the subject but I do know about Lagrangian and Hamiltonian dynamics (at the level of Landau-Lifschitz Vol. 1). Thanks in advance. :-)</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/39056/book-on-symplectic-geometry/39059#39059 Answer by Dick Palais for Book on Symplectic Geometry Dick Palais 2010-09-17T05:14:48Z 2010-09-17T05:14:48Z <p>You can find a very nice introduction to the subject in these notes by Ana Cannas da Silva:</p> <p>www.math.princeton.edu/~acannas/symplectic.pdf</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/39056/book-on-symplectic-geometry/39060#39060 Answer by Victor Protsak for Book on Symplectic Geometry Victor Protsak 2010-09-17T05:44:44Z 2010-09-17T05:59:46Z <p>If you are physically inclined, V.I.Arnold's <em>Mathematical methods of classical mechanics</em> provides a masterful short introduction to symplectic geometry, followed by a wealth of its applications to classical mechanics. The exposition is much more systematic than vol 1 of Landau and Lifschitz and, while mathematically sophisticated, it is also very lucid, demonstrating the interaction between physical ideas and mathematical concepts that support them. (It is also worth mentioning that Arnold was largely responsible for the reawakening of interest to symplectic geometry at the end of 1960s and pioneered the study of symplectic topology. Some of these developments were brand new when the book was first published in 1974 and are briefly discussed in the appendices).</p> <p>In addition to the notes by Cannas da Silva mentioned by Dick Palais, here are further two advanced books covering somewhat different territory:</p> <blockquote> <p>Michèle Audin, <em>Torus actions on symplectic manifolds</em> (2nd edition)<sup><b>A</b></sup></p> <p>Dusa McDuff and Dietmar Salamon, <em>Introduction to symplectic topology</em></p> </blockquote> <hr> <p><sup><b>A</b></sup> In her book, Michèle Audin herself recommends </p> <blockquote> <p>Paulette Libermann and Charles-Michel Marle, <em>Symplectic geometry and analytical mechanics</em></p> </blockquote> <p>as a wonderful introduction to symplectic geometry. </p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/39056/book-on-symplectic-geometry/39062#39062 Answer by Per Vognsen for Book on Symplectic Geometry Per Vognsen 2010-09-17T06:50:52Z 2010-09-17T06:50:52Z <p>Sternberg and Guillemin's Symplectic Techniques in Physics is one of a kind. In spite of the name it feels more like a text on mathematics than on physics, with the exception of the first motivating section of the book.</p> <p>Arnold's book that Victor recommends is also one of my favorites. But much of it covers the kind of material you might find in Goldstein or Landau-Lifschitz, albeit treated from a more sophisticated and geometric point of view. If you already have that thoroughly mastered, Sternberg and Guillemin might be more what you want, especially the later parts. </p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/39056/book-on-symplectic-geometry/39071#39071 Answer by Will Merry for Book on Symplectic Geometry Will Merry 2010-09-17T07:57:24Z 2010-09-17T07:57:24Z <p>My favourite book on symplectic geometry is "Symplectic Invariants and Hamiltonian Dynamics" by Hofer and Zehnder. It's wonderfully written. Another lovely book (which has just been reissued as an AMS Chelsea text) is Abraham and Marsden's book "Foundations of Mechanics" which covers a lot of symplectic geometry as well as so much more...</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/39056/book-on-symplectic-geometry/39136#39136 Answer by mathphysicist for Book on Symplectic Geometry mathphysicist 2010-09-17T19:37:28Z 2010-09-17T19:37:28Z <p>You can also try the book <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=5HbJJNYXoN0C" rel="nofollow">An introduction to symplectic geometry</a> by Rolf Berndt which should be a good fit given your prerequisites.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/39056/book-on-symplectic-geometry/39158#39158 Answer by Rodrigo Barbosa for Book on Symplectic Geometry Rodrigo Barbosa 2010-09-17T22:43:23Z 2010-09-17T22:43:23Z <p>For a more Lie-group focused account, you can try Robert Bryant's lectures on Lie groups and symplectic geometry which are available online <a href="http://www.math.duke.edu/~bryant/ParkCityLectures.pdf" rel="nofollow">here</a>. In the final lecture he describes the h-principle and others ideas of Gromov in symplectic geometry, like pseudo-holomorphic curves.</p>