Willmore hypersurfaces in a sphere (Q700500): Difference between revisions

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Willmore hypersurfaces in a sphere
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    Willmore hypersurfaces in a sphere (English)
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    22 October 2002
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    An \(n\)-dimensional hypersurface \(M\) in the \((n+1)\)-dimensional unit sphere \(S^{n+1}\) is called a Willmore hypersurface if it is an extremal hypersurface of the Willmore functional \[ \int_{M}(S-nH^{2})^{n/2} dv, \] where \(S\) is the square of the length of the second fundamental form and \(H\) is the mean curvature of \(M\). Common examples of Willmore hypersufaces are the tori \(W_{m,n-m}=S^{m}(\sqrt{1-r^{2}})\times S^{n-m}(r)\), \(r^{2}=m/n\), \(1\leq m\leq n-1\), called Willmore tori by the author. After some technical preparations (Lemmas 2.1 and 2.2) and by computing the Euler-Lagrange equation of the Willmore functional, the author gives -- in Theorem 1 -- a characterization of Willmore hypersurfaces in \(S^{n+1}\). Then, an integral inequality of Simons' type is proved in Theorem 3. In the case when \(S-nH^{2}<n\), Theorem 3 assures that either \(M\) is totally umbilical or has constant mean curvature. In the last section, the author gives a classification of isoparametric Willmore hypersurfaces.
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    Willmore submanifolds
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    minimal submanifolds
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    isoparametric Willmore hypersurface
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