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Study Guide for the Written Ph.D. Comprehensive Exam
This study guide is for use in preparing for exams to be given in
Fall 2001 or later.
Sample
comprehensive examinations
are available.
Part I: Algebra
- Vector spaces (linear algebra)
Matrix theory, vector spaces, linear transformations, linear operators,
eigensystems, inner products and norms, orthogonality and projection,
bilinear and quadratic forms, spectral theory in finite dimensions,
and basic properties of linear groups (such as GL(n), SL(n), the orthogonal
and unitary groups).
- Groups
Basic facts about groups, including cyclic, dihedral, and symmetric groups,
as well as linear (matrix) groups (see above). Also homomorphisms,
cosets and quotients, mapping properties and isomorphism theorems, free
groups, group operations (actions), applications of group actions to
geometric and combinatorial symmetry (e.g. symmetries of regular polyhedra,
counting formulas, Burnside's formula), the class equation, the
Sylow theorems, the structure theorem for finitely generated abelian groups.
- Rings
By a ring we mean a commutative ring with identity.
Topics include rings, homomorphisms, ideals, quotients,
mapping properties and isomorphism theorems, polynomial rings,
adjoining relations, integral domains, fraction fields, prime and
maximal ideals, unique factorization domains, modular arithmetic.
- Fields
Subfields of the complex numbers, function fields (basic notions only),
finite fields, field extensions, basic properties of finite extensions,
algebraic vs. transcendental extensions, algebraic closure.
Suggested courses:
Math 4107,
Math 4305,
and
Math 6121.
Math 4108 and
Math 6122
are also relevant.
Suggested reference: Michael Artin, Algebra, especially chapters 1-8, 10, 13.
Part II: Real analysis
- Set Theory
Cardinality, cartesian products and the Axiom of Choice, partial orders and
Zorn's lemma, well-ordering
- Measure Spaces
Sigma-algebras; the sigma-algebras of Borel and Lebesgue measurable sets;
measures, including the counting measure; Lebesgue measure; finite and
sigma-finite measures; signed measures, complex measures, and
product measures
- Integration Theory
The Lebesgue integral; integration with respect to a measure or signed
measure; convergence theorems, including Fatou's lemma, the monotone
convergence theorem, Levi's theorem, Lebesgue's dominated convergence theorem;
product measures and the theorems of Fubini and Tonelli; absolutely continuous
measures and the Radon-Nikodym Theorem; singular measures and the Lebesgue
decomposition
- Function Theory
Various modes of convergence; the theorems of Lusin and Egorov;
monotone functions and functions of bounded variation; differentiation,
absolutely continuous functions and the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
- Topological Spaces
The real number system; metric spaces, including completeness, the
Baire category theorem and its consequences; separation axioms;
compact spaces and the Tychonoff theorem
- The Classical Function Spaces
Lp and lp
spaces for 1 <= p <= infinity; C(K) spaces; Holder's and
Minkowski's inequalities, bounded linear functionals on
C(K) and on lp and
Lp for 1 <= p < infinity; Ascoli's theorem;
the Stone-Weierstrass theorem
- Elementary Functional Analysis
Hilbert space, the projection theorem, applications to approximation,
completeness and orthonormal bases, representation of bounded linear
functionals on Hilbert space, the Hahn-Banach, closed graph and open
mapping theorems
Suggested courses:
Math 6337.
Math 6338 and
Math 6580
are also relevant.
Suggested references include:
Folland, Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and their Applications,
2nd edition
Halmos, Measure Theory
Hewitt and Stromberg, Real and Abstract Analysis
Kreyzig, An Introduction to Functional Analysis
Royden, Real Analysis, 3d edition
Rudin, Real and Complex Analysis
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