Matthew F. Esplen’s scientific contributions

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (4)


Geometry
  • Book

June 2012

·

12 Reads

·

19 Citations

David A. Brannan

·

Matthew F. Esplen

·

Jeremy J. Gray

This richly illustrated and clearly written undergraduate textbook captures the excitement and beauty of geometry. The approach is that of Klein in his Erlangen programme: a geometry is a space together with a set of transformations of the space. The authors explore various geometries: affine, projective, inversive, hyperbolic and elliptic. In each case they carefully explain the key results and discuss the relationships between the geometries. New features in this second edition include concise end-of-chapter summaries to aid student revision, a list of further reading and a list of special symbols. The authors have also revised many of the end-of-chapter exercises to make them more challenging and to include some interesting new results. Full solutions to the 200 problems are included in the text, while complete solutions to all of the end-of-chapter exercises are available in a new Instructors' Manual, which can be downloaded from www.cambridge.org/9781107647831.


Geometry

February 2005

·

6 Reads

·

6 Citations



Citations (2)


... The inversion of a point p(r, ϑ) in the unit circle is the point p r −1 , ϑ . The inversion of a circle passing through the origin is a straight line (Brannan et al., 1999). The IOC solution derives from the vector, which minimizes, in a least squares sense, the variation in the projections of a set of sample vectors onto it. ...

Reference:

The Role of the Harmonic Vector Average in Motion Integration
Geometry
  • Citing Book
  • April 1999

... Este hecho facilita su uso práctico, ya que no se necesita ninguna herramienta de software para interpretar los resultados obtenidos, como en la carta esférica. Por tanto, para construir esta carta se utilizan dos modelos, asociados a la geometría hiperbólica, el modelo de Weierstrass en la superficie del hiperboloide y su proyección estereográfica en el disco de Poincaré en el plano (Brannan, 1999), como vemos en la Figura 8. Comenzamos considerando un punto del ρ-plano extendido ρ = ρ r + jρ x y lo aplicamos sobre la parte superior del hiperboloide de dos hojas ...

Geometry
  • Citing Article
  • February 2005