Embeddedness of minimal surfaces with total boundary curvature at most \(4\pi\) (Q1613291): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 19:55, 18 April 2024
scientific article
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English | Embeddedness of minimal surfaces with total boundary curvature at most \(4\pi\) |
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Embeddedness of minimal surfaces with total boundary curvature at most \(4\pi\) (English)
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1 September 2003
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\textit{J. C. C. Nitsche} proved [Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. 52, 319-329 (1973; Zbl 0285.49001)] that if \(\Gamma\) is an analytic simple curve in \(\mathbb{R}^3\) with total curvature at most \(4\pi\), then \(\Gamma\) bounds exactly one minimal disk \(M\) which is smoothly immersed. The following questions were left open: (i) Must \(M\) in fact be embedded? (ii) If \(\Gamma\) bounds other minimal surfaces, must they also be free of branch points, or even be smoothly embedded? In this paper the authors answer these questions in the affirmative way proving the following main result (Theorems 2.1, 3.2 and 4.1): Let \(\Gamma\) be a simple closed curve in \(\mathbb{R}^n\) with total curvature at most \(4\pi\) and let \(M\) be a minimal surface with boundary \(\Gamma\). Then \(M\) is embedded up to and including the boundary, with no interior branch points. Furthermore, at each boundary point \(p\) with exterior angle \(\theta\), the density of \(M\) at \(p\) is either \({1\over 2}-{\theta \over 2\pi}\) or \({1\over 2}+ {\theta \over 2\pi}\). At a cup (i.e. where \(\theta =\pi)\), the density of \(M\) is 0, unless \(\Gamma\) is contained in a plane.
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boundary curve
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Plateau problem
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total curvature
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minimal disk
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branch points
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