Constant-mean-curvature surface

Nodoid, a surface with constant mean curvature
Unduloid, a surface with constant mean curvature

In differential geometry, constant-mean-curvature (CMC) surfaces are surfaces with constant mean curvature.[1][2] This includes minimal surfaces as a subset, but typically they are treated as special case.

Note that these surfaces are generally different from constant Gaussian curvature surfaces, with the important exception of the sphere.

History

In 1841 Delaunay proved that the only surfaces of revolution with constant mean curvature were the surfaces obtained by rotating the roulettes of the conics. These are the plane, cylinder, sphere, the catenoid, the unduloid and nodoid.[3]

In 1853 J. H. Jellet showed that if S is a compact star-shaped surface in \R^3 with constant mean curvature, then it is the standard sphere.[4] Subsequently A. D. Alexandrov proved that a compact embedded surface in \R^3 with constant mean curvature H \neq 0 must be a sphere.[5] Based on this H. Hopf conjectured in 1956 that any immersed compact orientable constant mean curvature hypersurface in \R^nmust be a standard embedded n-1 sphere. This conjecture was disproven in 1982 by Wu-Yi Hsiang using a counterexample in \R^4. In 1984 Henry C. Wente constructed the Wente torus, an immersion into \R^3 of a torus with constant mean curvature. [6]

Up until this point it had seemed that CMC surfaces were rare; new techniques produced a plethora of examples.[7] In particular gluing methods appear to allow combining CMC surfaces fairly arbitrarily.[8][9] Delaunay surfaces can also be combined with immersed "bubbles", retaining their CMC properties.[10]

Triunduloid
Equal neck sizes
Unequal neck size triunduloid
Unequal neck sizes
Triunduloid with nodoid end
With nodoid end
Triunduloids with different neck sizes. As neck sizes are varied the asymptotic directions change.

Meeks showed that there are no embedded CMC surfaces with just one end in \R^3.[11] Korevaar, Kusner and Solomon proved that a complete embedded CMC surface will have ends asymptotic to unduloids.[12] Each end carries a n(2\pi-n) "force" along the asymptotic axis of the unduloid (where n is the circumference of the necks), the sum of which must be balanced for the surface to exist. Current work involves classification of families of embedded CMC surfaces in terms of their moduli spaces.[13] In particular, for k \geq 3 coplanar k-unduloids of genus 0 satisfy \sum_{i=1}^k n_i \leq (k-1)\pi for odd k, and \sum_{i=1}^k n_i \leq k\pi for even k. At most k  2 ends can be cylindrical.[7]

Generation methods

Representation formula

Like for minimal surfaces, there exist a close link to harmonic functions. An oriented surface S in \R^3 has constant mean curvature if and only if its Gauss map is a harmonic function.[2] Kenmotsu’s representation formula[14] is the counterpart to the Weierstrass–Enneper parameterization of minimal surfaces:

Let V be an open simply connected subset of \C and H be an arbitrary non-zero real constant. Suppose \phi: V \rightarrow \C is a harmonic function into the Riemann sphere. If \phi_{\bar z} \neq 0 then X : V \rightarrow R defined by

X(z) = \Re \int_{z_0}^z X_z(z)\,dz

with

X_z(z)=\frac{-1}{H(1+\phi(z)\bar\phi(z))^2} \left \{(1-\phi(z)^2, i(1+\phi(z)^2), 2\phi(z)) \frac{\bar{\partial\phi}}{\partial \bar z}(z) \right \}

for z \in V is a regular surface having \phi as Gauss map and mean curvature H.

For \phi(z)=-1/\bar z and H=1 this produces the sphere. \phi(z)=-e^{ix} and H=1/2 gives a cylinder where z=x+iv.

Conjugate cousin method

Lawson showed 1970 that each CMC surface in \R^3has an isometric "cousin" minimal surface in \mathbb{S}^3.[15][16] This allows constructions starting from geodesic polygons in \mathbb{S}^3, which are spanned by a minimal patch that can be extended into a complete surface by reflection, and then turned into a CMC surface.

Discrete numerical methods

Discrete differential geometry can be used to produce approximations to CMC surfaces (or discrete counterparts), typically by minimizing a suitable energy functional.[17][18]

Applications

CMC surfaces are natural for representations of soap bubbles, since they have the curvature corresponding to a nonzero pressure difference.

Besides macroscopic bubble surfaces CMC surfaces are relevant for the shape of the gas–liquid interface on a superhydrophobic surface.[19]

Like triply periodic minimal surfaces there has been interest in periodic CMC surfaces as models for block copolymers where the different components have a nonzero interfacial energy or tension. CMC analogs to the periodic minimal surfaces have been constructed, producing unequal partitions of space.[20][21] CMC structures have been observed in ABC triblock copolymers.[22]

In architecture CMC surfaces are relevant for air-supported structures such as inflatable domes and enclosures, as well as a source of flowing organic shapes.[23]

See also

References

  1. Nick Korevaar, Jesse Ratkin, Nat Smale, Andrejs Treibergs, A survey of the classical theory of constant mean curvature surfaces in R3, 2002
  2. 1 2 Carl Johan Lejdfors, Surfaces of Constant Mean Curvature. Master’s thesis Lund University, Centre for Mathematical Sciences Mathematics 2003:E11
  3. C. Delaunay, Sur la surface de révolution dont la courbure moyenne est constante, J. Math. Pures Appl., 6 (1841), 309–320.
  4. J. H. Jellet, Sur la Surface dont la Courbure Moyenne est Constant, J. Math. Pures Appl., 18 (1853), 163–167
  5. A. D. Alexandrov, Uniqueness theorem for surfaces in the large, V. Vestnik, Leningrad Univ. 13, 19 (1958), 5–8, Amer. Math. Soc. Trans. (Series 2) 21, 412–416.
  6. Wente, Henry C. (1986), "Counterexample to a conjecture of H. Hopf.", Pacific Journal of Mathematics 121: 193–243, doi:10.2140/pjm.1986.121.193.
  7. 1 2 Karsten Grosse-Brauckmann, Robert B. Kusner, John M. Sullivan. Coplanar constant mean curvature surfaces. Comm. Anal. Geom. 15:5 (2008) pp. 985–1023. ArXiv math.DG/0509210.
  8. N. Kapouleas. Complete constant mean curvature surfaces in Euclidean three space, Ann. of. Math. (2) 131 (1990), 239–330
  9. Rafe Mazzeo, Daniel Pollack, Gluing and Moduli for Noncompact Geometric Problems. 1996 arXiv:dg-ga/9601008
  10. I. Sterling and H. C. Wente, Existence and classification of constant mean curvature multibubbletons of finite and infinite type, Indiana Univ. Math. J. 42 (1993), no. 4, 1239–1266.
  11. Meeks W. H., The topology and geometry of embedded surfaces of constant mean curvature, J. Diff. Geom. 27 (1988) 539–552.
  12. Korevaar N., Kusner R., Solomon B., The structure of complete embedded surfaces with constant mean curvature, J. Diff. Geom. 30 (1989) 465–503.
  13. John M. Sullivan, A Complete Family of CMC Surfaces. In Integrable Systems, Geometry and Visualization, 2005, pp 237–245.
  14. K. Kenmotsu, Weierstrass Formula for Surfaces of Prescribed Mean Curvature, Math. Ann., 245 (1979), 89–99
  15. Lawson H.B., “Complete minimal surfaces in S3”, Annals of Math. 92 (1970) 335–374.
  16. Karsten Grosse-Brauckmann, Robert B Kusner, John M Sullivan. Triunduloids: Embedded constant mean curvature surfaces with three ends and genus zero. J. Reine Angew. Math, 564, pp. 35–61 2001 arXiv:math/0102183v2
  17. Smith, J. 2003. Three Applications of Optimization in Computer Graphics. PhD thesis, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA
  18. Hao Pan, Yi-King Choi, Yang Liu, Wenchao Hu, Qiang Du, Konrad Polthier, Caiming Zhang, Wenping Wang, Robust modeling of constant mean curvature surfaces. ACM Transactions on Graphics – SIGGRAPH 2012 Conference Proceedings. Volume 31 Issue 4, July 2012 Article No. 85
  19. E.J. Lobaton, T.R. Salamon. Computation of constant mean curvature surfaces: Application to the gas–liquid interface of a pressurized fluid on a superhydrophobic surface. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science. Volume 314, Issue 1, 1 October 2007, Pages 184–198
  20. D. M. Anderson, H. T. Davis, L. E. Scriven, J. C. C. Nitsche, Periodic Surfaces of Prescribed Mean Curvature in Advances in Chemical Physics vol 77, eds. I. Prigogine and S. A. Rice, John Wiley & Sons, 2007 , p. 337–396
  21. Meinhard Wohlgemuth, Nataliya Yufa, James Hoffman, and Edwin L. Thomas. Triply Periodic Bicontinuous Cubic Microdomain Morphologies by Symmetries. Macromolecules 2001, 34, 6083–6089
  22. Samuel P. Gido , Dwight W. Schwark , Edwin L. Thomas , Maria do Carmo Goncalves, Observation of a non-constant mean curvature interface in an ABC triblock copolymer, Macromolecules, 1993, 26 (10), pp 2636–2640
  23. Helmut Pottmann, Yang Liu, Johannes Wallner, Alexander Bobenko, Wenping Wang. Geometry of Multi-layer Freeform Structures for Architecture. ACM Transactions on Graphics – Proceedings of ACM SIGGRAPH 2007 Volume 26 Issue 3, July 2007 Article No. 65

External links

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