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Mean curvature

In mathematics, the mean curvature of a surface is an extrinsic measure of curvature that comes from differential geometry and that locally describes the curvature of an embedded surface in some ambient space such as Euclidean space.

The concept was used by Sophie Germain in her work on elasticity theory.[1][2] Jean Baptiste Marie Meusnier used it in 1776, in his studies of minimal surfaces. It is important in the analysis of minimal surfaces, which have mean curvature zero, and in the analysis of physical interfaces between fluids (such as soap films) which, for example, have constant mean curvature in static flows, by the Young-Laplace equation.

Definition

Let   be a point on the surface   inside the three dimensional Euclidean space R3. Each plane through   containing the normal line to   cuts   in a (plane) curve. Fixing a choice of unit normal gives a signed curvature to that curve. As the plane is rotated by an angle   (always containing the normal line) that curvature can vary. The maximal curvature   and minimal curvature   are known as the principal curvatures of  .

The mean curvature at   is then the average of the signed curvature over all angles  :

 .

By applying Euler's theorem, this is equal to the average of the principal curvatures (Spivak 1999, Volume 3, Chapter 2):

 

More generally (Spivak 1999, Volume 4, Chapter 7), for a hypersurface   the mean curvature is given as

 

More abstractly, the mean curvature is the trace of the second fundamental form divided by n (or equivalently, the shape operator).

Additionally, the mean curvature   may be written in terms of the covariant derivative   as

 

using the Gauss-Weingarten relations, where   is a smoothly embedded hypersurface,   a unit normal vector, and   the metric tensor.

A surface is a minimal surface if and only if the mean curvature is zero. Furthermore, a surface which evolves under the mean curvature of the surface  , is said to obey a heat-type equation called the mean curvature flow equation.

The sphere is the only embedded surface of constant positive mean curvature without boundary or singularities. However, the result is not true when the condition "embedded surface" is weakened to "immersed surface".[3]

Surfaces in 3D space

For a surface defined in 3D space, the mean curvature is related to a unit normal of the surface:

 

where the normal chosen affects the sign of the curvature. The sign of the curvature depends on the choice of normal: the curvature is positive if the surface curves "towards" the normal. The formula above holds for surfaces in 3D space defined in any manner, as long as the divergence of the unit normal may be calculated. Mean Curvature may also be calculated

 

where I and II denote first and second quadratic form matrices, respectively.

If   is a parametrization of the surface and   are two linearly independent vectors in parameter space then the mean curvature can be written in terms of the first and second fundamental forms as

 
where  ,  ,  ,  ,  ,  .[4]

For the special case of a surface defined as a function of two coordinates, e.g.  , and using the upward pointing normal the (doubled) mean curvature expression is

 

In particular at a point where  , the mean curvature is half the trace of the Hessian matrix of  .

If the surface is additionally known to be axisymmetric with  ,

 

where   comes from the derivative of  .

Implicit form of mean curvature

The mean curvature of a surface specified by an equation   can be calculated by using the gradient   and the Hessian matrix

 

The mean curvature is given by:[5][6]

 

Another form is as the divergence of the unit normal. A unit normal is given by   and the mean curvature is

 

Mean curvature in fluid mechanics

An alternate definition is occasionally used in fluid mechanics to avoid factors of two:

 .

This results in the pressure according to the Young-Laplace equation inside an equilibrium spherical droplet being surface tension times  ; the two curvatures are equal to the reciprocal of the droplet's radius

 .

Minimal surfaces

 
A rendering of Costa's minimal surface.

A minimal surface is a surface which has zero mean curvature at all points. Classic examples include the catenoid, helicoid and Enneper surface. Recent discoveries include Costa's minimal surface and the Gyroid.

CMC surfaces

An extension of the idea of a minimal surface are surfaces of constant mean curvature. The surfaces of unit constant mean curvature in hyperbolic space are called Bryant surfaces.[7]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Marie-Louise Dubreil-Jacotin on Sophie Germain 2008-02-23 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Lodder, J. (2003). "Curvature in the Calculus Curriculum". The American Mathematical Monthly. 110 (7): 593–605. doi:10.2307/3647744. JSTOR 3647744.
  3. ^ Wente, Henry C. (1986). "Counterexample to a conjecture of H. Hopf". Pacific Journal of Mathematics. 121 (1): 193–243. doi:10.2140/pjm.1986.121.193. MR 0815044. Zbl 0586.53003.
  4. ^ Do Carmo, Manfredo (2016). Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces (Second ed.). Dover. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-486-80699-0.
  5. ^ Goldman, R. (2005). "Curvature formulas for implicit curves and surfaces". Computer Aided Geometric Design. 22 (7): 632–658. doi:10.1016/j.cagd.2005.06.005.
  6. ^ Spivak, M (1975). A Comprehensive Introduction to Differential Geometry. Vol. 3. Publish or Perish, Boston.
  7. ^ Rosenberg, Harold (2002), "Bryant surfaces", The global theory of minimal surfaces in flat spaces (Martina Franca, 1999), Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 1775, Berlin: Springer, pp. 67–111, doi:10.1007/978-3-540-45609-4_3, ISBN 978-3-540-43120-6, MR 1901614.

References

  • Spivak, Michael (1999), A comprehensive introduction to differential geometry (Volumes 3-4) (3rd ed.), Publish or Perish Press, ISBN 978-0-914098-72-0, (Volume 3), (Volume 4).
  • P.Grinfeld (2014). Introduction to Tensor Analysis and the Calculus of Moving Surfaces. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4614-7866-9.

mean, curvature, mathematics, mean, curvature, displaystyle, surface, displaystyle, extrinsic, measure, curvature, that, comes, from, differential, geometry, that, locally, describes, curvature, embedded, surface, some, ambient, space, such, euclidean, space, . In mathematics the mean curvature H displaystyle H of a surface S displaystyle S is an extrinsic measure of curvature that comes from differential geometry and that locally describes the curvature of an embedded surface in some ambient space such as Euclidean space The concept was used by Sophie Germain in her work on elasticity theory 1 2 Jean Baptiste Marie Meusnier used it in 1776 in his studies of minimal surfaces It is important in the analysis of minimal surfaces which have mean curvature zero and in the analysis of physical interfaces between fluids such as soap films which for example have constant mean curvature in static flows by the Young Laplace equation Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Surfaces in 3D space 1 2 Implicit form of mean curvature 2 Mean curvature in fluid mechanics 3 Minimal surfaces 3 1 CMC surfaces 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesDefinition EditLet p displaystyle p be a point on the surface S displaystyle S inside the three dimensional Euclidean space R3 Each plane through p displaystyle p containing the normal line to S displaystyle S cuts S displaystyle S in a plane curve Fixing a choice of unit normal gives a signed curvature to that curve As the plane is rotated by an angle 8 displaystyle theta always containing the normal line that curvature can vary The maximal curvature k 1 displaystyle kappa 1 and minimal curvature k 2 displaystyle kappa 2 are known as the principal curvatures of S displaystyle S The mean curvature at p S displaystyle p in S is then the average of the signed curvature over all angles 8 displaystyle theta H 1 2 p 0 2 p k 8 d 8 displaystyle H frac 1 2 pi int 0 2 pi kappa theta d theta By applying Euler s theorem this is equal to the average of the principal curvatures Spivak 1999 Volume 3 Chapter 2 H 1 2 k 1 k 2 displaystyle H 1 over 2 kappa 1 kappa 2 More generally Spivak 1999 Volume 4 Chapter 7 for a hypersurface T displaystyle T the mean curvature is given as H 1 n i 1 n k i displaystyle H frac 1 n sum i 1 n kappa i More abstractly the mean curvature is the trace of the second fundamental form divided by n or equivalently the shape operator Additionally the mean curvature H displaystyle H may be written in terms of the covariant derivative displaystyle nabla as H n g i j i j X displaystyle H vec n g ij nabla i nabla j X using the Gauss Weingarten relations where X x displaystyle X x is a smoothly embedded hypersurface n displaystyle vec n a unit normal vector and g i j displaystyle g ij the metric tensor A surface is a minimal surface if and only if the mean curvature is zero Furthermore a surface which evolves under the mean curvature of the surface S displaystyle S is said to obey a heat type equation called the mean curvature flow equation The sphere is the only embedded surface of constant positive mean curvature without boundary or singularities However the result is not true when the condition embedded surface is weakened to immersed surface 3 Surfaces in 3D space Edit For a surface defined in 3D space the mean curvature is related to a unit normal of the surface 2 H n displaystyle 2H nabla cdot hat n where the normal chosen affects the sign of the curvature The sign of the curvature depends on the choice of normal the curvature is positive if the surface curves towards the normal The formula above holds for surfaces in 3D space defined in any manner as long as the divergence of the unit normal may be calculated Mean Curvature may also be calculated 2 H Trace I I I 1 displaystyle 2H text Trace mathrm II mathrm I 1 where I and II denote first and second quadratic form matrices respectively If S x y displaystyle S x y is a parametrization of the surface and u v displaystyle u v are two linearly independent vectors in parameter space then the mean curvature can be written in terms of the first and second fundamental forms asl G 2 m F n E 2 E G F 2 displaystyle frac lG 2mF nE 2 EG F 2 where E I u u displaystyle E mathrm I u u F I u v displaystyle F mathrm I u v G I v v displaystyle G mathrm I v v l I I u u displaystyle l mathrm II u u m I I u v displaystyle m mathrm II u v n I I v v displaystyle n mathrm II v v 4 For the special case of a surface defined as a function of two coordinates e g z S x y displaystyle z S x y and using the upward pointing normal the doubled mean curvature expression is 2 H z S z S S z 1 S 2 1 S x 2 2 S y 2 2 S x S y 2 S x y 1 S y 2 2 S x 2 1 S x 2 S y 2 3 2 displaystyle begin aligned 2H amp nabla cdot left frac nabla z S nabla z S right amp nabla cdot left frac nabla S nabla z sqrt 1 nabla S 2 right amp frac left 1 left frac partial S partial x right 2 right frac partial 2 S partial y 2 2 frac partial S partial x frac partial S partial y frac partial 2 S partial x partial y left 1 left frac partial S partial y right 2 right frac partial 2 S partial x 2 left 1 left frac partial S partial x right 2 left frac partial S partial y right 2 right 3 2 end aligned In particular at a point where S 0 displaystyle nabla S 0 the mean curvature is half the trace of the Hessian matrix of S displaystyle S If the surface is additionally known to be axisymmetric with z S r displaystyle z S r 2 H 2 S r 2 1 S r 2 3 2 S r 1 r 1 S r 2 1 2 displaystyle 2H frac frac partial 2 S partial r 2 left 1 left frac partial S partial r right 2 right 3 2 frac partial S partial r frac 1 r left 1 left frac partial S partial r right 2 right 1 2 where S r 1 r displaystyle frac partial S partial r frac 1 r comes from the derivative of z S r S x 2 y 2 textstyle z S r S left sqrt x 2 y 2 right Implicit form of mean curvature Edit The mean curvature of a surface specified by an equation F x y z 0 displaystyle F x y z 0 can be calculated by using the gradient F F x F y F z displaystyle nabla F left frac partial F partial x frac partial F partial y frac partial F partial z right and the Hessian matrix Hess F 2 F x 2 2 F x y 2 F x z 2 F y x 2 F y 2 2 F y z 2 F z x 2 F z y 2 F z 2 displaystyle textstyle mbox Hess F begin pmatrix frac partial 2 F partial x 2 amp frac partial 2 F partial x partial y amp frac partial 2 F partial x partial z frac partial 2 F partial y partial x amp frac partial 2 F partial y 2 amp frac partial 2 F partial y partial z frac partial 2 F partial z partial x amp frac partial 2 F partial z partial y amp frac partial 2 F partial z 2 end pmatrix The mean curvature is given by 5 6 H F Hess F F T F 2 Trace Hess F 2 F 3 displaystyle H frac nabla F mbox Hess F nabla F mathsf T nabla F 2 text Trace mbox Hess F 2 nabla F 3 Another form is as the divergence of the unit normal A unit normal is given by F F displaystyle frac nabla F nabla F and the mean curvature is H 1 2 F F displaystyle H frac 1 2 nabla cdot left frac nabla F nabla F right Mean curvature in fluid mechanics EditAn alternate definition is occasionally used in fluid mechanics to avoid factors of two H f k 1 k 2 displaystyle H f kappa 1 kappa 2 This results in the pressure according to the Young Laplace equation inside an equilibrium spherical droplet being surface tension times H f displaystyle H f the two curvatures are equal to the reciprocal of the droplet s radius k 1 k 2 r 1 displaystyle kappa 1 kappa 2 r 1 Minimal surfaces Edit A rendering of Costa s minimal surface Main article Minimal surface A minimal surface is a surface which has zero mean curvature at all points Classic examples include the catenoid helicoid and Enneper surface Recent discoveries include Costa s minimal surface and the Gyroid CMC surfaces Edit Main article Constant mean curvature surface An extension of the idea of a minimal surface are surfaces of constant mean curvature The surfaces of unit constant mean curvature in hyperbolic space are called Bryant surfaces 7 See also EditGaussian curvature Mean curvature flow Inverse mean curvature flow First variation of area formula Stretched grid methodNotes Edit Marie Louise Dubreil Jacotin on Sophie Germain Archived 2008 02 23 at the Wayback Machine Lodder J 2003 Curvature in the Calculus Curriculum The American Mathematical Monthly 110 7 593 605 doi 10 2307 3647744 JSTOR 3647744 Wente Henry C 1986 Counterexample to a conjecture of H Hopf Pacific Journal of Mathematics 121 1 193 243 doi 10 2140 pjm 1986 121 193 MR 0815044 Zbl 0586 53003 Do Carmo Manfredo 2016 Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces Second ed Dover p 158 ISBN 978 0 486 80699 0 Goldman R 2005 Curvature formulas for implicit curves and surfaces Computer Aided Geometric Design 22 7 632 658 doi 10 1016 j cagd 2005 06 005 Spivak M 1975 A Comprehensive Introduction to Differential Geometry Vol 3 Publish or Perish Boston Rosenberg Harold 2002 Bryant surfaces The global theory of minimal surfaces in flat spaces Martina Franca 1999 Lecture Notes in Math vol 1775 Berlin Springer pp 67 111 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 45609 4 3 ISBN 978 3 540 43120 6 MR 1901614 References EditSpivak Michael 1999 A comprehensive introduction to differential geometry Volumes 3 4 3rd ed Publish or Perish Press ISBN 978 0 914098 72 0 Volume 3 Volume 4 P Grinfeld 2014 Introduction to Tensor Analysis and the Calculus of Moving Surfaces Springer ISBN 978 1 4614 7866 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mean curvature amp oldid 1117701985, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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