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Achieve for Online Calculus Course for University of California-Santa Cruz (1-Term Online) by Jon Rogawski; Frank Baurle; Anthony Tromba  - First Edition, 2022 from Macmillan Student Store
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Achieve for Online Calculus Course for University of California-Santa Cruz (1-Term Online)

First  Edition|©2022  Jon Rogawski; Frank Baurle; Anthony Tromba

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Table of Contents

Authors

Jon Rogawski

Jon Rogawski received his undergraduate and master’s degrees in mathematics simultaneously from Yale University, and he earned his PhD in mathematics from Princeton University, where he studied under Robert Langlands. Before joining the Department of Mathematics at UCLA in 1986, where he was a full professor, he held teaching and visiting positions at the Institute for Advanced Study, the University of Bonn, and the University of Paris at Jussieu and Orsay. Jon’s areas of interest were number theory, automorphic forms, and harmonic analysis on semisimple groups. He published numerous research articles in leading mathematics journals, including the research monograph Automorphic Representations of Unitary Groups in Three Variables (Princeton University Press). He was the recipient of a Sloan Fellowship and an editor of the Pacific Journal of Mathematics and the Transactions of the AMS. As a successful teacher for more than 30 years, Jon Rogawski listened and learned much from his own students. These valuable lessons made an impact on his thinking, his writing, and his shaping of a calculus text. Sadly, Jon Rogawski passed away in September 2011. Jon’s commitment to presenting the beauty of calculus and the important role it plays in students’ understanding of the wider world is the legacy that lives on in each new edition of Calculus.


Frank Baurle


Anthony Tromba

Anthony Tromba is Professor of Mathematics at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He received his B.S. from Cornell University, and his M.A. and Ph.D, from Princeton University. His research interests are in the applications of ideas in global nonlinear analysis to various problems in analysis and topology. His research has been honored by an invitation to address The International Congress of Mathematicians. Professor Tromba has been Ordinarius Professor at The Ludwigs Maximillians University, Munich, A Visiting Member of The Institute of Advanced Study in Princeton, and A Research Group Leader at The Max Planck Institute, Bonn.
He has authored, or co-authored over nine books, two of which, including Vector Calculus, have been translated into multiple languages.


Table of Contents

Jon Rogawski

Jon Rogawski received his undergraduate and master’s degrees in mathematics simultaneously from Yale University, and he earned his PhD in mathematics from Princeton University, where he studied under Robert Langlands. Before joining the Department of Mathematics at UCLA in 1986, where he was a full professor, he held teaching and visiting positions at the Institute for Advanced Study, the University of Bonn, and the University of Paris at Jussieu and Orsay. Jon’s areas of interest were number theory, automorphic forms, and harmonic analysis on semisimple groups. He published numerous research articles in leading mathematics journals, including the research monograph Automorphic Representations of Unitary Groups in Three Variables (Princeton University Press). He was the recipient of a Sloan Fellowship and an editor of the Pacific Journal of Mathematics and the Transactions of the AMS. As a successful teacher for more than 30 years, Jon Rogawski listened and learned much from his own students. These valuable lessons made an impact on his thinking, his writing, and his shaping of a calculus text. Sadly, Jon Rogawski passed away in September 2011. Jon’s commitment to presenting the beauty of calculus and the important role it plays in students’ understanding of the wider world is the legacy that lives on in each new edition of Calculus.


Frank Baurle


Anthony Tromba

Anthony Tromba is Professor of Mathematics at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He received his B.S. from Cornell University, and his M.A. and Ph.D, from Princeton University. His research interests are in the applications of ideas in global nonlinear analysis to various problems in analysis and topology. His research has been honored by an invitation to address The International Congress of Mathematicians. Professor Tromba has been Ordinarius Professor at The Ludwigs Maximillians University, Munich, A Visiting Member of The Institute of Advanced Study in Princeton, and A Research Group Leader at The Max Planck Institute, Bonn.
He has authored, or co-authored over nine books, two of which, including Vector Calculus, have been translated into multiple languages.


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