Focusing on algebraic geometry, this collection features 30 influential papers by David Mumford, organized into three major areas. Each section includes a summary highlighting key results and their impact, contributed by experts like David Gieseker and George Kempf. This compilation serves as a valuable resource for researchers, graduate students, mathematical physicists, and historians, providing insights into Mumford's significant contributions and their ongoing relevance in the field.
David Bryant Mumford Book order
David Mumford is an Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at Brown University. His work primarily focuses on mathematical analysis and computer vision. He gained recognition for his groundbreaking contributions to image processing and pattern recognition. His research has had a significant impact on both theoretical and applied mathematics.






- 2019
- 2007
Tata lectures on theta
- 235 pages
- 9 hours of reading
This volume is the first of three in a series surveying the theory of theta functions. Based on lectures given by the author at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in Bombay, these volumes constitute a systematic exposition of theta functions, beginning with their historical roots as analytic functions in one variable (Volume I), touching on some of the beautiful ways they can be used to describe moduli spaces (Volume II), and culminating in a methodical comparison of theta functions in analysis, algebraic geometry, and representation theory (Volume III).
- 1999
The red book of varieties and schemes
- 304 pages
- 11 hours of reading
Mumford's famous Red Book gives a simple readable account of the basic objects of algebraic geometry, preserving as much as possible their geometric flavor and integrating this with the tools of commutative algebra. It is aimed at graduate students or mathematicians in other fields wishing to learn quickly what algebraic geometry is all about. This new edition also includes an overview of the theory of curves, their moduli spaces and their Jacobians, one of the most exciting fields within algebraic geometry. The book is aimed at graduate students and professors seeking to learn i) the concept of „scheme“ as part of their study of algebraic geometry and ii) an overview of moduli problems for curves and of the use of theta functions to study these.