The analysis, processing, evolution, optimization and/or regulation, and
control of shapes and images appear naturally in engineering (shape
optimization, image processing, visual control), numerical analysis
(interval analysis), physics (front propagation), biological
morphogenesis, population dynamics (migrations), and dynamic economic
theory.
These problems are currently studied with tools forged out of
differential geometry and functional analysis, thus requiring shapes and
images to be smooth. However, shapes and images are basically sets, most
often not smooth. J.-P. Aubin thus constructs another vision, where
shapes and images are just any compact set. Hence their evolution --
which requires a kind of differential calculus -- must be studied in the
metric space of compact subsets. Despite the loss of linearity, one can
transfer most of the basic results of differential calculus and
differential equations in vector spaces to mutational calculus and
mutational equations in any mutational space, including naturally the
space of nonempty compact subsets.
"Mutational and Morphological Analysis" offers a structure that embraces
and integrates the various approaches, including shape optimization and
mathematical morphology.
Scientists and graduate students will find here other powerful
mathematical tools for studying problems dealing with shapes and images
arising in so many fields.