Skew loops and quadric surfaces (Q1864138): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 22:32, 18 April 2024
scientific article
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English | Skew loops and quadric surfaces |
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Skew loops and quadric surfaces (English)
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17 March 2003
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A skew loop is a closed space curve without parallel tangent lines. The authors prove: The only complete \(C^2\) surfaces in \(\mathbb{R}^3\) with a point of positive Gauss curvature which contain no \(C^2\) skew loops are the quadrics (Theorem 1.1), in particular: ellipsoids are the only closed \(C^2\) surfaces immersed in \(\mathbb{R}^3\) which admit no \(C^2\) skew loops; on the other hand: Any cylinder with a strictly convex asymmetric \(C^2\) base contains a skew loop with nonvanishing curvature (Prop. 4.1). Theorem 1.1 is proved by a sequence of intermediate results: every \(C^2\) loop on the sphere \(S^2\) is regularly homotopic in \(S^2\) to its own tantrix; positively curved surfaces admit no skew figure-eights; convex quadrics have no skew loops; surfaces without skew loops have symmetric local cross sections. By a result of W. Blaschke, the last property characterizes the quadrics, and thus gives Theorem 1.1.
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quadric
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closed curve
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skew loop
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tantrix
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