Is there an up to date version of this?

Is there an up to date version of this?

Other urls found in this thread:

imperium.lenin.ru/~verbit/MATH/programma.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misha_Verbitsky
Veeky
arxiv.org
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

High School:
• Euclidean geometry, complex numbers, scalar multiplication, Cauchy-Bunyakovskii inequality. Introduction to quantum mechanics (Kostrikin-Manin). Groups of transformations of a plane and space. Derivation of trigonometric identities. Geometry on the upper half-plane (Lobachevsky). Properties of inversion. The action of fractional-linear transformations.
• Rings, fields. Linear algebra, finite groups, Galois theory. Proof of Abel's theorem. Basis, rank, determinants, classical Lie groups. Dedekind cuts. Construction of real and complex numbers. Definition of the tensor product of vector spaces.
• Set theory. Zorn's lemma. Completely ordered sets. Cauchy-Hamel basis. Cantor-Bernstein theorem.
• Metric spaces. Set-theoretic topology (definition of continuous mappings, compactness, proper mappings). Definition of compactness in terms of convergent sequences for spaces with a countable base. Homotopy, fundamental group, homotopy equivalence.
• p-adic numbers, Ostrovsky's theorem, multiplication and division of p-adic numbers by hand.
• Differentiation, integration, Newton-Leibniz formula. Delta-epsilon formalism.

Freshman:
• Analysis in R^n. Differential of a mapping. Contraction mapping lemma. Implicit function theorem. The Riemann-Lebesgue integral. ("Analysis" by Laurent Schwartz, "Analysis" by Zorich, "Theorems and Problems in Functional Analysis" by Kirillov-Gvishiani)
• Hilbert spaces, Banach spaces (definition). The existence of a basis in a Hilbert space. Continuous and discontinuous linear operators. Continuity criteria. Examples of compact operators. ("Analysis" by Laurent Schwartz, "Analysis" by Zorich, "Theorems and Problems in Functional Analysis" by Kirillov-Gvishiani)
• Smooth manifolds, submersions, immersions, Sard's theorem. The partition of unity. Differential topology (Milnor-Wallace). Transversality. Degree of mapping as a topological invariant.
• Differential forms, the de Rham operator, the Stokes theorem, the Maxwell equation of the electromagnetic field. The Gauss-Ostrogradsky theorem as a particular example.
• Complex analysis of one variable (according to the book of Henri Cartan or the first volume of Shabat). Contour integrals, Cauchy's formula, Riemann's theorem on mappings from any simply-connected subset [math] C [/math] to a circle, the extension theorem, Little Picard Theorem. Multivalued functions (for example, the logarithm).
• The theory of categories, definition, functors, equivalences, adjoint functors (Mac Lane, Categories for the working mathematician, Gelfand-Manin, first chapter).
• Groups and Lie algebras. Lie groups. Lie algebras as their linearizations. Universal enveloping algebra, Poincaré-Birkhoff-Witt theorem. Free Lie algebras. The Campbell-Hausdorff series and the construction of a Lie group by its algebra (yellow Serre, first half).

Sophomore:
• Algebraic topology (Fuchs-Fomenko). Cohomology (simplicial, singular, de Rham), their equivalence, Poincaré duality, homotopy groups. Dimension. Fibrations (in the sense of Serre), spectral sequences (Mishchenko, "Vector bundles ...").
• Computation of the cohomology of classical Lie groups and projective spaces.
• Vector bundles, connectivity, Gauss-Bonnet formula, Euler, Chern, Pontryagin, Stiefel-Whitney classes. Multiplicativity of Chern characteristic. Classifying spaces ("Characteristic Classes", Milnor and Stasheff).
• Differential geometry. The Levi-Civita connection, curvature, algebraic and differential identities of Bianchi. Killing fields. Gaussian curvature of a two-dimensional Riemannian manifold. Cellular decomposition of loop space in terms of geodesics. The Morse theory on loop space (Milnor's Morse Theory and Arthur Besse's Einstein Manifolds). Principal bundles and connections on them.
• Commutative algebra (Atiyah-MacDonald). Noetherian rings, Krull dimension, Nakayama lemma, adic completion, integrally closed, discrete valuation rings. Flat modules, local criterion of flatness.
• The Beginning of Algebraic Geometry. (The first chapter of Hartshorne or Shafarevich or green Mumford). Affine varieties, projective varieties, projective morphisms, the image of a projective variety is projective (via resultants). Sheaves. Zariski topology. Algebraic manifold as a ringed space. Hilbert's Nullstellensatz. Spectrum of a ring.
• Introduction to homological algebra. Ext, Tor groups for modules over a ring, resolvents, projective and injective modules (Atiyah-MacDonald). Construction of injective modules. Grothendieck Duality (from the book Springer Lecture Notes in Math, Grothendieck Duality, numbers 21 and 40).
• Number theory; Local and global fields, discriminant, norm, group of ideal classes (blue book of Cassels and Frohlich).

Sophomore (cont):
• Reductive groups, root systems, representations of semisimple groups, weights, Killing form. Groups generated by reflections, their classification. Cohomology of Lie algebras. Computing cohomology in terms of invariant forms. Singular cohomology of a compact Lie group and the cohomology of its algebra. Invariants of classical Lie groups. (Yellow Serre, the second half, Hermann Weyl, "The Classical Groups: Their Invariants and Representations"). Constructions of special Lie groups. Hopf algebras. Quantum groups (definition).

Junior:
• K-theory as a cohomology functor, Bott periodicity, Clifford algebras. Spinors (Atiyah's book "K-Theory" or AS Mishchenko "Vector bundles and their applications"). Spectra. Eilenberg-MacLane Spaces. Infinite loop spaces (according to the book of Switzer or the yellow book of Adams or Adams "Lectures on generalized cohomology", 1972).
• Differential operators, pseudodifferential operators, symbol, elliptic operators. Properties of the Laplace operator. Self-adjoint operators with discrete spectrum. The Green's operator and applications to the Hodge theory on Riemannian manifolds. Quantum mechanics. (R. Wells's book on analysis or Mishchenko "Vector bundles and their application").
• The index formula (Atiyah-Bott-Patodi, Mishchenko), the Riemann-Roch formula. The zeta function of an operator with a discrete spectrum and its asymptotics.
• Homological algebra (Gel'fand-Manin, all chapters except the last chapter). Cohomology of sheaves, derived categories, triangulated categories, derived functor, spectral sequence of a double complex. The composition of triangulated functors and the corresponding spectral sequence. Verdier's duality. The formalism of the six functors and the perverse sheaves.

Junior (cont):
• Algebraic geometry of schemes, schemes over a ring, projective spectra, derivatives of a function, Serre duality, coherent sheaves, base change. Proper and separable schemes, a valuation criterion for properness and separability (Hartshorne). Functors, representability, moduli spaces. Direct and inverse images of sheaves, higher direct images. With proper mapping, higher direct images are coherent.
• Cohomological methods in algebraic geometry, semicontinuity of cohomology, Zariski's connectedness theorem, Stein factorization.
• Kähler manifolds, Lefschetz's theorem, Hodge theory, Kodaira's relations, properties of the Laplace operator (chapter zero of Griffiths-Harris, is clearly presented in the book by André Weil, "Kähler manifolds"). Hermitian bundles. Line bundles and their curvature. Line bundles with positive curvature. Kodaira-Nakano's theorem on the vanishing of cohomology (Griffiths-Harris).
• Holonomy, the Ambrose-Singer theorem, special holonomies, the classification of holonomies, Calabi-Yau manifolds, Hyperkähler manifolds, the Calabi-Yau theorem.
• Spinors on manifolds, Dirac operator, Ricci curvature, Weizenbeck-Lichnerovich formula, Bochner's theorem. Bogomolov's theorem on the decomposition of manifolds with zero canonical class (Arthur Besse, "Einstein varieties").
• Tate cohomology and class field theory (Cassels-Fröhlich, blue book). Calculation of the quotient group of a Galois group of a number field by the commutator. The Brauer Group and its applications.
• Ergodic theory. Ergodicity of billiards.
• Complex curves, pseudoconformal mappings, Teichmüller spaces, Ahlfors-Bers theory (according to Ahlfors's thin book).

Senior:
• Rational and profinite homotopy type. The nerve of the etale covering of the cellular space is homotopically equivalent to its profinite type. Topological definition of etale cohomology. Action of the Galois group on the profinite homotopy type (Sullivan, "Geometric topology").
• Etale cohomology in algebraic geometry, comparison functor, Henselian rings, geometric points. Base change. Any smooth manifold over a field locally in the etale topology is isomorphic to A^n. The etale fundamental group (Milne, Danilov's review from VINITI and SGA 4 1/2, Deligne's first article).
• Elliptic curves, j-invariant, automorphic forms, Taniyama-Weil conjecture and its applications to number theory (Fermat's theorem).
• Rational homotopies (according to the last chapter of Gel'fand-Manin's book or Griffiths-Morgan-Long-Sullivan's article). Massey operations and rational homotopy type. Vanishing Massey operations on a Kahler manifold.
• Chevalley groups, their generators and relations (according to Steinberg's book). Calculation of the group K_2 from the field (Milnor, Algebraic K-Theory).
• Quillen's algebraic K-theory, BGL^+ and Q-construction (Suslin's review in the 25th volume of VINITI, Quillen's lectures - Lecture Notes in Math. 341).
• Complex analytic manifolds, coherent sheaves, Oka's coherence theorem, Hilbert's nullstellensatz for ideals in a sheaf of holomorphic functions. Noetherian ring of germs of holomorphic functions, Weierstrass's theorem on division, Weierstrass's preparation theorem. The Branched Cover Theorem. The Grauert-Remmert theorem (the image of a compact analytic space under a holomorphic morphism is analytic). Hartogs' theorem on the extension of an analytic function. The multidimensional Cauchy formula and its applications (the uniform limit of holomorphic functions is holomorphic).

Specialist: (Fifth year of College):
• The Kodaira-Spencer theory. Deformations of the manifold and solutions of the Maurer-Cartan equation. Maurer-Cartan solvability and Massey operations on the DG-Lie algebra of the cohomology of vector fields. The moduli spaces and their finite dimensionality (see Kontsevich's lectures, or Kodaira's collected works). Bogomolov-Tian-Todorov theorem on deformations of Calabi-Yau.
• Symplectic reduction. The momentum map. The Kempf-Ness theorem.
• Deformations of coherent sheaves and fiber bundles in algebraic geometry. Geometric theory of invariants. The moduli space of bundles on a curve. Stability. The compactifications of Uhlenbeck, Gieseker and Maruyama. The geometric theory of invariants is symplectic reduction (the third edition of Mumford's Geometric Invariant Theory, applications of Francis Kirwan).
• Instantons in four-dimensional geometry. Donaldson's theory. Donaldson's Invariants. Instantons on Kähler surfaces.
• Geometry of complex surfaces. Classification of Kodaira, Kähler and non-Kähler surfaces, Hilbert scheme of points on a surface. The criterion of Castelnuovo-Enriques, the Riemann-Roch formula, the Bogomolov-Miyaoka-Yau inequality. Relations between the numerical invariants of the surface. Elliptic surfaces, Kummer surface, surfaces of type K3 and Enriques.
• Elements of the Mori program: the Kawamata-Viehweg vanishing theorem, theorems on base point freeness, Mori's Cone Theorem (Clemens-Kollar-Mori, "Higher dimensional complex geometry" plus the not translated Kollar-Mori and Kawamata-Matsuki-Masuda).
• Stable bundles as instantons. Yang-Mills equation on a Kahler manifold. The Donaldson-Uhlenbeck-Yau theorem on Yang-Mills metrics on a stable bundle. Its interpretation in terms of symplectic reduction. Stable bundles and instantons on hyper-Kähler manifolds; An explicit solution of the Maurer-Cartan equation in terms of the Green operator.

Specialist (cont):
• Pseudoholomorphic curves on a symplectic manifold. Gromov-Witten invariants. Quantum cohomology. Mirror hypothesis and its interpretation. The structure of the symplectomorphism group (according to the article of Kontsevich-Manin, Polterovich's book "Symplectic geometry", the green book on pseudoholomorphic curves and lecture notes by McDuff and Salamon)
• Complex spinors, the Seiberg-Witten equation, Seiberg-Witten invariants. Why the Seiberg-Witten invariants are equal to the Gromov-Witten invariants.
• Hyperkähler reduction. Flat bundles and the Yang-Mills equation. Hyperkähler structure on the moduli space of flat bundles (Hitchin-Simpson).
• Mixed Hodge structures. Mixed Hodge structures on the cohomology of an algebraic variety. Mixed Hodge structures on the Maltsev completion of the fundamental group. Variations of mixed Hodge structures. The nilpotent orbit theorem. The SL(2)-orbit theorem. Closed and vanishing cycles. The exact sequence of Clemens-Schmid (Griffiths red book "Transcendental methods in algebraic geometry").
• Non-Abelian Hodge theory. Variations of Hodge structures as fixed points of C^*-actions on the moduli space of Higgs bundles (Simpson's thesis).
• Weil conjectures and their proof. l-adic sheaves, perverse sheaves, Frobenius automorphism, weights, the purity theorem (Beilinson, Bernstein, Deligne, plus Deligne, Weil conjectures II)
• The quantitative algebraic topology of Gromov, (Gromov "Metric structures for Riemannian and non-Riemannian spaces"). Gromov-Hausdorff metric, the precompactness of a set of metric spaces, hyperbolic manifolds and hyperbolic groups, harmonic mappings into hyperbolic spaces, the proof of Mostow's rigidity theorem (two compact Kählerian manifolds covered by the same symmetric space X of negative curvature are isometric if their fundamental groups are isomorphic, and dim X> 1).
• Varieties of general type, Kobayashi and Bergman metrics, analytic rigidity (Siu)

thanks, but is there a nice picture version with cute anime girls?

>Is there an up to date version of this?

WHY? Do you think math education has changed?

no, but the picture has since it was made in few threads

Rudin is a meme

yes, but I already flushed it sorry

nice meme.

>nice meme.
What do you mean?

cross boarders get out

make me

Yes

Lang is a meme

every book ever made is a meme

>look at me I'm going to list a bunch of topic too advanced for the title so people will think I'm smart.
kys brainlet

I think its best to understand rigorously some logic and proofs, and then pick up things as you go, being motivated by some problems (go into details when its needed). Why the fuck would you read 100 fat math books for no reason whatsoever. (and i like math)

>brainlet
Oh, the irony...

This guy's suggestion for sophomore is probably where a senior would be normally, really wishful thinking. Everything else seems to be grad student territory.

Proving 0nce again tha math guys are pretentious, delusional, phonies...

>Proving 0nce again tha math guys are pretentious, delusional, phonies...
What do you mean?

That's recommended books from a russian PhD. mathematician for non-brainlets, doesn't really need titles as you might notice it focuses more on topics rather than books which means you're free to choose whatever. And it does have some books recommended.

Next time stop being so ignorant and google it, he also explains the reason for this list etc at the bottom, but with your thick head you might aswell not read it and reply with some ignorant shit cause you're just a faggot...

No you brainlet it's a list of topics which are not onlt too advanced for their labels but are out of order
>highschool (so 4 years)

>Introduction to quantum mechanics
>Derivation of trigonometric identities

>Metric spaces


>Differentiation


>Freshman: More material condensed into 1 year
As I said kys brainlet

also no "he" dosn't because it's just a retarded pasta made by some russian whose PhD is in jerking of to hentai

also from reading this imperium.lenin.ru/~verbit/MATH/programma.html
he is confirmed retarded

Is there a version for engineers? EE preferably.

>"he"
Huh?

>No you brainlet it's a list of topics which are not onlt too advanced for their labels but are out of order
What made you think they were supposed to be in order?

>also no "he" dosn't because it's just a retarded pasta made by some russian whose PhD is in jerking of to hentai
His PhD is actually on "Cohomology of compact Hyperkaehler Manifolds"

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misha_Verbitsky

no

It's a pasta that very few people could actually follow.

(((Verbitskiy))) fanboi strikes again.

Are you that guy who shills for putin every time I create russian thread on r9k?

>It's a pasta that very few people could actually follow.
Why not?

:(

Is Tao's analysis I any good? I jumped straight into baby Rudin after Spivak and didn't find it hard enough to warrant an introductory book.

This: Also (brief) Introduction to QM was done in my highschool, i think that's pretty common outside US but just introduction because you don't get enough time in HS to do QM for real, which is later picked up in undergrad.
I think you are missing the whole point, this list is not for average student, this is for non-brainlets who spent their days doing differential equations while their classmates were still doing Algebra I. But I guess you're too fucking retarded to notice and let the point pass you like a missed bullet... So desu, you're an ignorant fag who just spit bullshit because you don't like it, you should kys more than anyone in here.

can someone put this in an image with cute anime girls?

we need this desu senpai

what chapter are you in?

How do get into logic? Should I start with Aristotle? Are there any classic textbooks?

Veeky Forums wiki has a list for EE, also mit open courses
Ignore that user, your post triggered his autism.
>muh mathematics

>How do get into logic?
Studying logic is pointless, don't bother.

not the dude you were discussing to but even if I get your point, some of us are indeed brainlets who just wanna learn more of math and have no interest in or reason to pursue a mathematician career (producing proofs and theoems).

I myself am an engineer but wanna learn math better because I did an europoor Master in "industrial mathematics" and noticed there's much to gain in my line of work from it.
Basically, the watered down and purely mechanical math knowledge they teach us is far from being enough in today's work unless you wanna do menial labor.

Veeky Forums-science.wikia.com/wiki/Mathematics#Proofs_and_Mathematical_Reasoning
Veeky Forums-science.wikia.com/wiki/Mathematics#Introductory_Logic

Veeky Forums-science.wikia.com/wiki/Electrical_and_Electronics_Engineering#Fundamentals.C2.A0

Read the AoE after Electronics. Add in Analog Electronics, Electromagnetics, Numerical Analysis, and Control Theory for a good foundation.

But what is the point of this "list"? It Is really useful or is just another crap list? Another user post it here in Veeky Forums before.

>But what is the point of this "list"?
Why is this program so, and not another?

It does not seem to me that all areas of mathematics are equally valuable; I'm sure that mathematics does not have a value in itself. Otherwise, mathematics turns out to be a kind of complex intellectual game, and we find ourselves in the area designated by Herman Hesse ("The Bead Game"), where there are no criteria at all - except for the evaluation of the professional community. A professional community, which is to hide, is both corrupt and disunited. The professional community of mathematicians does not have a single criterion, and if it had, it would only be worse, probably because it would be based on vague power games on the principle of you scratch me, and I'll scratch you, but for the Academy of Sciences.

Nevertheless, some areas of mathematics are undergoing a very obvious flourishing. Manin noticed in the late 1980s that the 1960s were the heyday for algebraic topology, the 1970s for algebraic geometry, and the 1980s for mathematical physics. In this sense, the 1980s continue to this day. Mathematical ideas associated with the 1990s (mirror hypothesis, Gromov-Whitten invariants, Seiberg-Whitten invariants, quantum cohomology) all come from string geometry.

I think that this is not an accident. Mathematics has lost common criteria, having lost the general context; at the moment, far fewer people understand what is happening in science in general than 20 years ago, and even less than 40 years ago. In the conditions of the loss of abstract criteria, the only effective criterion is the utilitarian one. Mathematics is only of interest insofar as it is related to string theory; this is the basic assumption that I do not want to discuss now.

Relevancy for physics is the only criterion that we have left; and almost all mathematics related to physics refers to string geometry. This thesis is well supported by the observation given above: (almost) all the interesting ideas of the last 20 years are related to string physics.

Those wishing to follow mathematics (in the sense in which this word is understood above) are invited to the server arxiv.org , where almost all interesting works on mathematics are laid out right after they are written.

The above mathematical program is needed just for this. Of course, not all works in arxiv.org will be immediately understandable, even to the student who passed all the exams; but to explain to him what the matter is, it will be possible for half an hour.

It is possible, of course, to study mathematics and not understanding the general context in which it exists; but such studies, in my opinion, further destroy the general context, thereby exacerbating the erosion of criteria, ignorance and corruption that already dominate. Illiterate occupations in professional mathematics do more harm than good; All the articles will still not be read by anyone, and most articles are read by no one at all. Writing another meaningless article makes it difficult to access articles that are meaningful; in this sense, mathematics 20-30 years ago was much more distinct and meaningful science than now.There will come a time when "progress" in mathematics simply stop, and each new item will repeat the results, already proven by someone in one of the unread and forgotten articles. In many fields of science, this is the situation now.

It does not seem to me that all areas of mathematics are equally valuable; I'm sure that mathematics does not have a value in itself. Otherwise, mathematics turns out to be a kind of complex intellectual game, and we find ourselves in the area designated by Herman Hesse ("The Bead Game"), where there are no criteria at all - except for the evaluation of the professional community. A professional community, which is to hide, is both corrupt and disunited. The professional community of mathematicians does not have a single criterion,
>le edgy communist
and if it had, it would only be worse, probably because it would be based on vague power games on the principle of you scratch me, and I'll scratch you, but for the Academy of Sciences.

No faggot you missed my point
nobody has done this or ever will do this because it's even if a kid in HS had the maturity to do this they wouldn't because it leaves out so much shit (differential equations isn't even on the list kek) even though it each year has too much material.
And fuck your shitty bait if you think I'll believe that they taught you quantum mechanics out of Linear Algebra and Geometry by Suetin, Kostrikin and Manin

>faggot
Why the homophobia?

>some of us are indeed brainlets who just wanna learn more of math and have no interest in or reason to pursue a mathematician career
Then the list is not for you, simple as that honestly, nothing else to it

I'm pretty sure some have done these and more will. These aren't in a specific order but rather topics he thinks you should know.
And no, fuck you. I simply said "introductory quantum mechanics" which was very brief and only a chapter in our physics book, not whatever bullshit you're spitting out right now, and verbitsky's list says "The beginning of quantum mechanics (Kostrikin-Manin)" which I know nothing about but sound very basic QM for beginners. And I did learn Linear Algebra in hs (technically after cause it was in the summer after graduation).
Your bait or level of ignorance is unmesurable right now, did you even read the list? Which ones in the highschool section of that list sound impossible to you?
It does leave out bunch of shit because this is mostly stuff that are taught very briefly or not at all in highschool (p-adic numbers for example) but basic things like Pythagorean theorem and Limits are not on there because those are better taught.

Again since you're missing the point so fucking much with your brainletism let me spill it out for you: This is not an ordered list of everything you should go through in highschool, only more niche stuff that you might not come across at that education level or are simple enough (like Linear Algebra) but left out and taught in univeristy instead. And also for non-average students.

t. yet another pretentious math faggot and attention-whore

>pretentious
You're using that word but I don't think you know what it means

pre·ten·tious
prəˈten(t)SHəs/
adjective
adjective: pretentious

attempting to impress by affecting greater importance, talent, culture, etc., than is actually possessed.
"a pretentious literary device"
synonyms: affected, ostentatious, showy; More

They didn't do p-adics at your school nice try brainlet

>Stewart's Calculus for """motivation"""
are you serious?

Congratulations, you've just taken the autism test and you passed

Wow, so "pretentious" and "mathematician" have the same meaning? I guess "pretentious mathematician" is redundant, then. Hey, they should just put a picture of Euler or Gauss or Hilbert in front of "pretentious" so everyone knows what it means right away.

Can you start at elementary school? I've forgotten how to work with fractions.

Why cute anime girls? An irrelevant distraction. Let's get some Archimedean solids instead.

Thanks user.

If you keep this thread alive I will try to find all of the charts I have when I get home. I swear I have one for every Veeky Forums & /g/ related major I’ll just have to dig through a couple different hard drives

>In many fields of science, this is the situation now.
Which fields?

>can someone put this in an image with cute anime girls?
This.

I met him once. He works here in Brazil, at IMPA. Cool guy.

...

>no anime girls
dropped

Can you get one for physics please?