James McKee is Professor of Pure Mathematics at Royal Holloway, University of London. He is an expert on algorithmic and computational methods in number theory, particularly for elliptic curves, polynomials as well as Pisot and Salem numbers. In recent years his interests have become more combinatorial, and with his students and Smyth he has used structures related to graphs to study algebraic integers through their eigenvalues.Chris Smyth, a professorial fellow in Number Theory at the University of Edinburgh, has a long-standing interest in Mahler measure. This dates from his PhD thesis, where he studied Lehmer’s conjecture for nonreciprocal integer polynomials. He discovered the first known closed formula for a 2-dimensional Mahler measure involving an L-function, leading to a deep study of such formulae by Boyd, Deninger, Rodriguez Villegas and others. He invented the explicit auxiliary function method, which applies semi-infinite linear programming to number-theoretic problems, including to the Mahler measure of totally real polynomials.
“The reader at the graduate level having enough time and energy can learn a lot from this book about the Mahler measure, conjugate sets of algebraic integers, and related results. Some chapters of the book are quite accessible to undergraduate students as well, and may serve as an introduction to their research in this area.” (Arturas Dubickas, Mathematical Reviews, May, 2023) “It contains some material that is unavailable elsewhere. Each chapter is concluded by notes and a glossary of newly introduced definitions. … The reader at the graduate level having enough time and energy from this book can learn a lot about the Mahler measure, conjugate sets of algebraic integers and related results.” (Artūras Dubickas, zbMATH 1486.11003, 2022)