TY - BOOK AU - Arnold,Vladimir I. TI - Catastrophe theory SN - 9783540548119 U1 - 514.74 22 PY - 1992///, 2004 CY - New York, N.Y. PB - Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg KW - CATASTROFES (MATEMATICAS) KW - TEORIA DE LAS CATASTROFES (MATEMATICAS) N1 - Bibliografía: p. 129-150; 1. Singularities, Bifurcations, and Catastrophe Theories -- 2. Whitney’s Singularity Theory -- 3. Applications of Whitney’s Theory -- 4. A Catastrophe Machine -- 5. Bifurcations of Equilibrium States -- 6. Loss of Stability of Equilibrium and the Generation of Auto-Oscillations -- 7. Singularities of Stability Boundaries and the Principle of the Fragility of Good Things -- 8. Caustics, Wave Fronts and Their Metamorphoses -- 9. Large Scale Distribution of Matter in the Universe -- 10. Singularities in Optimization Problems, the Maxima Function -- 11. Singularities of Accessibility Boundaries of attainability -- 12. Smooth surfaces and their projections -- 13. The problem of bypassing an obstacle -- 14. Symplectic and contact geometry -- Appendix: The precursors of catastrophe theory N2 - Singularity theory is growing very fast and many new results have been discovered since the Russian edition appeared: for instance the relation of the icosahedron to the problem of by­ passing a generic obstacle. The reader can find more details about this in the articles "Singularities of ray systems" and "Singularities in the calculus of variations" listed in the bi­ bliography of the present edition. Moscow, September 1983 v. I. Arnold Preface to the Russian Edition "Experts discuss forecasting disasters" said a New York Times report on catastrophe theory in November 1977. The London Times declared Catastrophe Theory to be the "main intellectual movement of the century" while an article on catastrophe theory in Science was headed "The emperor has no clothes". This booklet explains what catastrophe theory is about and why it arouses such controversy. It also contains non-con­ troversial results from the mathematical theories of singulari­ ties and bifurcation. The author has tried to explain the essence of the fundamen­ tal results and applications to readers having minimal mathe­ matical background but the reader is assumed to have an in­ quiring mind. ER -