Hilbert's talk at the second International Congress of 1900 in Paris
marked the beginning of a new era in the calculus of variations. A
development began which, within a few decades, brought tremendous
success, highlighted by the 1929 theorem of Ljusternik and Schnirelman
on the existence of three distinct prime closed geodesics on any compact
surface of genus zero, and the 1930/31 solution of Plateau's problem by
Douglas and Radó. The book gives a concise introduction to variational
methods and presents an overview of areas of current research in the
field.
The fourth edition gives a survey on new developments in the field. In
particular it includes the proof for the convergence of the Yamabe flow
and a detailed treatment of the phenomenon of blow-up. Also the recently
discovered results for backward bubbling in the heat flow for harmonic
maps or surfaces are discussed. Aside from these more significant
additions, a number of smaller changes throughout the text have been
made and the references have been updated.