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Is there a treatment of "infinitesimal operators" that is rigorous from the epsilon-delta point of view?
In looking for material on the infinitesimal transformations of Lie groups, I find many things online about infinitesimal operators. Most seem to be by people who take the idea of infinitesimals seriously and I don't think they are talking about the rigorous approach to infinitesimals [a la Abraham Robinson and "nonstandard analysis".
I suppose people who work on mainfolds and various morphisms also can deal with infinitesimal operators via some abstraction. However, I'd like to know if there is an approach to infinitesimal operators ( in general, not simply Lie group operators) that is essentially from the "advanced calculus" point of view.
(If not, I suppose I'll have to think about them like a physicist.)
In looking for material on the infinitesimal transformations of Lie groups, I find many things online about infinitesimal operators. Most seem to be by people who take the idea of infinitesimals seriously and I don't think they are talking about the rigorous approach to infinitesimals [a la Abraham Robinson and "nonstandard analysis".
I suppose people who work on mainfolds and various morphisms also can deal with infinitesimal operators via some abstraction. However, I'd like to know if there is an approach to infinitesimal operators ( in general, not simply Lie group operators) that is essentially from the "advanced calculus" point of view.
(If not, I suppose I'll have to think about them like a physicist.)