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Optimal transport: theory and applications - 413

Ollivier, Yann(Edited by)Pajot, Herve(Edited by)Villani, Cedric(Edited by)
Part of the London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series series
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The theory of optimal transportation has its origins in the eighteenth century when the problem of transporting resources at a minimal cost was first formalised.

Through subsequent developments, particularly in recent decades, it has become a powerful modern theory.

This book contains the proceedings of the summer school 'Optimal Transportation: Theory and Applications' held at the Fourier Institute in Grenoble.

The event brought together mathematicians from pure and applied mathematics, astrophysics, economics and computer science.

Part I of this book is devoted to introductory lecture notes accessible to graduate students, while Part II contains research papers.

Together, they represent a valuable resource on both fundamental and advanced aspects of optimal transportation, its applications, and its interactions with analysis, geometry, PDE and probability, urban planning and economics.

Topics covered include Ricci flow, the Euler equations, functional inequalities, curvature-dimension conditions, and traffic congestion.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1139991353 / 9781139991353
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
519.6
16/07/2014
England
English
288 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Conference proceedings Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.