Torrent details for "Banasiak J. Introduction to Mathematical Methods in Population T…" Log in to bookmark
Controls:
×
Report Torrent
Please select a reason for reporting this torrent:
Your report will be reviewed by our moderation team.
×
Report Information
Loading report information...
This torrent has been reported 0 times.
Report Summary:
| User | Reason | Date |
|---|
Failed to load report information.
×
Success
Your report has been submitted successfully.
Checked by:
Category:
Language:
None
Total Size:
20.9 MB
Info Hash:
D173ADC90C3D0470DD74A3E330B435F537BB207C
Added By:
Added:
April 21, 2026, 4:28 p.m.
Stats:
|
(Last updated: April 21, 2026, 4:31 p.m.)
| File | Size |
|---|---|
| Banasiak J. Introduction to Mathematical Methods in Population Theory 2025.pdf | 20.9 MB |
Name
DL
Uploader
Size
S/L
Added
NOTE
SOURCE: Banasiak J. Introduction to Mathematical Methods in Population Theory 2025
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COVER

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MEDIAINFO
Textbook in PDF format An introduction to the mathematical models commonly used in life sciences Provides foundations of the theory of monotone dynamical systems and its applications to epidemiology Covers both discrete and continuous models This textbook provides an introduction to the mathematical methods used to analyse deterministic models in life sciences, including population dynamics, epidemiology and ecology. The book covers both discrete and continuous models. The presentation emphasises the solvability of the equations appearing in the mathematical modelling of natural phenomena and, in the absence of solutions, the analysis of their relevant properties. Of particular interest are methods that allow for determining the long-term behaviour of solutions. Thus, the book covers a range of techniques, from the classical Lyapunov theorems and positivity methods based on the Perron–Frobenius theorem, to the more modern monotone dynamical system approach. The book offers a comprehensive presentation of the Lyapunov theory, including the inverse Lyapunov theorems with applications to perturbed equations and Vidyasagar theorem. Furthermore, it provides a coherent presentation of the foundations of the theory of monotone dynamical systems with its applications to epidemiological models. Another feature of the book is the derivation of the McKendrick–von Foerster equation from the discrete Leslie model and the analysis of the long-term behaviour of its solutions. Designed for upper undergraduate courses and beyond, this textbook is written for students and researchers looking to master the mathematics of the tools commonly used to analyse life science models. It therefore goes somewhat deeper into mathematics than typical books at this level but should be accessible to anyone with a good command of calculus with elements of real and complex analysis and linear algebra; the necessary concepts are collected in the appendices
×


