Euclidean triangles have no hot spots (Q2287646): Difference between revisions
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scientific article
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English | Euclidean triangles have no hot spots |
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Euclidean triangles have no hot spots (English)
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21 January 2020
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The authors completely prove the hot spots conjecture for Euclidean triangles, that is, they show that any eigenfunction associated with the second (i.e., smallest nontrivial) eigenvalue of the Neumann Laplacian on a Euclidean triangle \(T\subset\mathbb{R}^2\) has no critical points in the interior of \(T\). The conjecture had been the subject of a polymath project and had only been proved for particular classes of triangles (see [\textit{B. Siudeja}, Math. Z. 280, 783--806 (2015; Zbl 1335.35164)]). The principal statement here (Theorem 1.1) is somewhat stronger: excluding the vertices, any second eigenfunction can have at most one critical point, which necessarily lies on a side of \(T\) and, in this case, the critical point is a nondegenerate critical point with Morse index one. The proof is entirely analytic, no probabilistic arguments are used. The idea behind the proof is quite natural and elegant, although the details are relatively involved. The strategy consists of considering, for each given triangle \(T_0\), a family of triangles \(T_t\) joining \(T_0\) to a right isosceles triangle \(T_1\), where the second eigenfunction is known explicitly, and studying how critical points of the eigenfunction of \(T_t\) could disappear as \(t \to 1\).
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Laplace operator
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Neumann eigenfunctions
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hot spots conjecture
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