Polynomials pervade mathematics, virtually every branch of mathematics
from algebraic number theory and algebraic geometry to applied analysis
and computer science, has a corpus of theory arising from polynomials.
The material explored in this book primarily concerns polynomials as
they arise in analysis; it focuses on polynomials and rational functions
of a single variable. The book is self-contained and assumes at most a
senior-undergraduate familiarity with real and complex analysis.
After an introduction to the geometry of polynomials and a discussion of
refinements of the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra, the book turns to a
consideration of various special polynomials. Chebyshev and Descartes
systems are then introduced, and Müntz systems and rational systems are
examined in detail. Subsequent chapters discuss denseness questions and
the inequalities satisfied by polynomials and rational functions.
Appendices on algorithms and computational concerns, on the
interpolation theorem, and on orthogonality and irrationality conclude
the book.