Auxiliary Polynomials in Number Theory

“Auxiliary Polynomials in Number Theory” by David Masser, published by Cambridge University Press on July 21, 2016, is a comprehensive exploration of a classical method in mathematics. This edition spans 348 pages and is presented in English. The book offers a unified account of various aspects of this powerful method, making it accessible through simple explanations and applications in several areas of number theory.
Readers will find that the book covers topics such as diophantine approximation and transcendence, while also placing the method within a broader context that includes exponential sums and counting problems in finite fields and the field of rationals. The author introduces key ideas independently in a ‘molecular’ fashion, ensuring clarity for advanced undergraduates and postgraduate students. With over 700 exercises provided, the book serves as both a guiding resource and a challenge, appealing to professionals in number theory and algebraic geometry.
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This unified account of various aspects of a powerful classical method, easy to understand in its simplest forms, is illustrated by applications in several areas of number theory. As well as including diophantine approximation and transcendence, which were mainly responsible for its invention, the author places the method in a broader context by exploring its application in other areas, such as exponential sums and counting problems in both finite fields and the field of rationals. Throughout the book, the method is explained in a ‘molecular’ fashion, where key ideas are introduced independently. Each application is the most elementary significant example of its kind and appears with detailed references to subsequent developments, making it accessible to advanced undergraduates as well as postgraduate students in number theory or related areas. It provides over 700 exercises both guiding and challenging, while the broad array of applications should interest professionals in fields from number theory to algebraic geometry.
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