TL;DR: In this paper, a new global idea was introduced to solve the Yamabe problem in dimensions 3, 4, and 5, and the existence of a positive solution u on M of the equation was proved in all remaining cases.
Abstract: A well-known open question in differential geometry is the question of whether a given compact Riemannian manifold is necessarily conformally equivalent to one of constant scalar curvature. This problem is known as the Yamabe problem because it was formulated by Yamabe [8] in 1960, While Yamabe's paper claimed to solve the problem in the affirmative, it was found by N. Trudinger [6] in 1968 that Yamabe's paper was seriously incorrect. Trudinger was able to correct Yamabe's proof in case the scalar curvature is nonpositive. Progress was made on the case of positive scalar curvature by T. Aubin [1] in 1976. Aubin showed that if dim M > 6 and M is not conformally flat, then M can be conformally changed to constant scalar curvature. Up until this time, Aubin's method has given no information on the Yamabe problem in dimensions 3, 4, and 5. Moreover, his method exploits only the local geometry of M in a small neighborhood of a point, and hence could not be used on a conformally flat manifold where the Yamabe problem is clearly a global problem. Recently, a number of geometers have been interested in the conformally flat manifolds of positive scalar curvature where a solution of Yamabe's problem gives a conformally flat metric of constant scalar curvature, a metric of some geometric interest. Note that the class of conformally flat manifolds of positive scalar curvature is closed under the operation of connected sum, and hence contains connected sums of spherical space forms with copies of S X S~. In this paper we introduce a new global idea into the problem and we solve it in the affirmative in all remaining cases; that is, we assert the existence of a positive solution u on M of the equation
TL;DR: The present book is not really intended as an updated exposition or extension of the theory in those volumes, but brings in developments of the Theory as necessary and as inspired by a number of applications that are discussed throughout the book.
Abstract: Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman startled the computer security world in 1975 with their paper “New Directions in Cryptography”, which introduced public-key cryptography [7]. There is now evidence that three cryptographers at the British Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), the British equivalent of the National Security Agency, may have predated this work as well as the discovery of the Rivest-Shamir-Adleman (RSA) public-key encryption algorithm [9]. It appears, however, that the British researchers did not appreciate the significance of their discovery. Since the mid 1970s, cryptography has become big business, a bestseller (Applied Cryptography by Bruce Schneier has sold over two hundred thousand copies), and an extremely active area of research at the intersection of mathematics and computer science. A plethora of new books in the area currently floods the bookstores. This review cannot discuss them all. Instead I will delineate the subareas of this burgeoning field and focus on some of the texts that I believe will be of more interest to Bulletin readers.
TL;DR: The Ricci Curvature as mentioned in this paper is a riemannian geometrical model for the Yamabe problem in the context of harmonic maps, which is based on the Ricci Cartesian equation.
TL;DR: On trouve une classe extensive de varietes localement conformement plates dont les applications developpes sont injectives as mentioned in this paper, and les applications of injectives.
Abstract: On trouve une classe extensive de varietes localement conformement plates dont les applications developpantes sont injectives