Graduate ODE textbook - MathOverflow most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-05-22T08:28:21Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/81221 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/81221/graduate-ode-textbook Graduate ODE textbook Miles 2011-11-18T05:02:58Z 2013-01-11T02:32:53Z <p>Suppose that a hypothetical math grad student was pretty comfortable with first-year real variables and algebra, and had even studied some other things (algebraic geometry, Riemannian geometry, complex analysis, algebraic topology, algebraic number theory), but had miraculously never taken a differential equations course (despite the geometry) and wanted to learn some ODEs. What book would you recommend? This student would be happy to learn more analysis if necessary to understand what's in this ODE book.</p> <p>In other words: I'm asking for your recommendations for a ODE book that is allowed to have arbitrary prerequisites from analysis and algebra and topology and even geometry, but with no knowledge of differential equations presumed.</p> <p>Thank you!</p> <p>(Note: It could have occurred to the hypothetical student to talk to his/her advisor/other faculty members, but in that case the student would still be interested in MathOverflow's response.)</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/81221/graduate-ode-textbook/81229#81229 Answer by Sean for Graduate ODE textbook Sean 2011-11-18T08:00:37Z 2011-11-18T08:00:37Z <p>Probably not quite right but a GTM book you might be interested in is Olver's book "Applications of Lie Groups to Differential Equations" given your background.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/81221/graduate-ode-textbook/81234#81234 Answer by Christopher A. Wong for Graduate ODE textbook Christopher A. Wong 2011-11-18T08:48:49Z 2011-11-18T08:48:49Z <p>There are way too many approaches to ODEs to have any one book cover them all. I occasionally use a book called <em>Differential Equations and Dynamical Systems</em>, by Lawrence Perko. The focus of this book is on <em>qualitative</em> behavior - existence of fixed points, limit cycles, blow-up solutions, etc.</p> <p>I would not call this a standard introduction to ODE - it does not cover some of the absolute basics. However, I think the emphasis of this text on geometry, and on using some more modern results, makes the book a decent choice.</p> <p>Some flaws: The book really only presupposes mastery of analysis. There are some tools missing, in particular from geometry/topology, that could make the presentation a bit cleaner. It sounds like you have a strong geometry/topology background, so maybe this disqualifies this text for you.</p> <p>For a more classical treatment of ODEs, in particular the treatment of ODEs as linear operators (Sturm-Liouville theory), I might go for Coddington's <em>Theory of Ordinary Differential Equations</em>. It is <em>very</em> classical, but it really does cover all the essential theory. </p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/81221/graduate-ode-textbook/81245#81245 Answer by Julien Puydt for Graduate ODE textbook Julien Puydt 2011-11-18T11:53:03Z 2011-11-18T11:53:03Z <p>Henri Cartan's course in differential calculus does cover quite a few useful things for differential equations, from a high-level point of view : you'll find the notion of differentiation in a generic form, the big theorems are proven (local inversion, Cauchy-Lipschitz, ...).</p> <p>For the low-level and the explicit, Arnold's "Ordinary differential equations" is a must-read, as Qiaochu Yuan already pointed out.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/81221/graduate-ode-textbook/81248#81248 Answer by Julián Aguirre for Graduate ODE textbook Julián Aguirre 2011-11-18T13:42:29Z 2011-11-18T13:42:29Z <p>Ordinary Differential Equations by Philip Hartman, John Wiley &amp; sons, 1964 might be what you are looking for.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/81221/graduate-ode-textbook/118576#118576 Answer by Kevin Pond for Graduate ODE textbook Kevin Pond 2013-01-10T21:35:31Z 2013-01-10T21:35:31Z <p>Here's a nice book by Gerald Teschl.</p> <p><a href="http://www.mat.univie.ac.at/~gerald/ftp/book-ode/ode.pdf" rel="nofollow">http://www.mat.univie.ac.at/~gerald/ftp/book-ode/ode.pdf</a></p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/81221/graduate-ode-textbook/118600#118600 Answer by drbobmeister for Graduate ODE textbook drbobmeister 2013-01-11T02:32:53Z 2013-01-11T02:32:53Z <p>I really like <i>Ordinary Differential Equations</i> by Jack K. Hale. It's very rigorous and thorough in the fundamentals, has a great section on periodic linear systems, and covers some advanced stuff such as integral manifolds. Arnold, Abraham and Marsden, and Hirsch, Smale and Devaney are also nice, though the emphasis is different.</p>