In this book, I present an expanded version of the contents of my
lectures at a Seminar of the DMV (Deutsche Mathematiker Vereinigung) in
Düsseldorf, June, 1986. The title "Nonlinear methods in complex
geometry" already indicates a combination of techniques from nonlinear
partial differential equations and geometric concepts. In older
geometric investigations, usually the local aspects attracted more
attention than the global ones as differential geometry in its
foundations provides approximations of local phenomena through
infinitesimal or differential constructions. Here, all equations are
linear. If one wants to consider global aspects, however, usually the
presence of curvature Ieads to a nonlinearity in the equations. The
simplest case is the one of geodesics which are described by a system of
second ordernonlinear ODE; their linearizations are the Jacobi fields.
More recently, nonlinear PDE played a more and more pro inent röle in
geometry. Let us Iist some of the most important ones: - harmonic maps
between Riemannian and Kählerian manifolds - minimal surfaces in
Riemannian manifolds - Monge-Ampere equations on Kähler manifolds -
Yang-Mills equations in vector bundles over manifolds. While the
solution of these equations usually is nontrivial, it can Iead to very
signifi- cant results in geometry, as solutions provide maps,
submanifolds, metrics, or connections which are distinguished by
geometric properties in a given context. All these equations are
elliptic, but often parabolic equations are used as an auxiliary tool to
solve the elliptic ones.