Rank-one convex hulls in \(\mathbb R^{2\times 2}\)
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2575174
DOI10.1007/S00526-004-0272-YzbMath1104.49013OpenAlexW4244507291MaRDI QIDQ2575174
Publication date: 8 December 2005
Published in: Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00526-004-0272-y
Methods involving semicontinuity and convergence; relaxation (49J45) Convexity of real functions of several variables, generalizations (26B25) Variants of convex sets (star-shaped, ((m, n))-convex, etc.) (52A30)
Related Items (12)
Numerical evidence towards a positive answer to Morrey's problem ⋮ On quasiconvex hulls in symmetric \(2\times 2\) matrices ⋮ New directions in real algebraic geometry. Abstracts from the workshop held March 19--24, 2023 ⋮ T5 configurations and hyperbolic systems ⋮ \(T_5\)-configurations and non-rigid sets of matrices ⋮ On the Rank-1 convex hull of a set arising from a hyperbolic system of Lagrangian elasticity ⋮ Upper semicontinuity of the lamination hull ⋮ Regularity of minima: an invitation to the dark side of the calculus of variations. ⋮ On the structure of the quasiconvex hull in planar elasticity ⋮ A variational approach to the local character of \(G\)-closure: the convex case ⋮ Topology and geometry of nontrivial rank-one convex hulls for two-by-two matrices ⋮ Extremal rank-one convex integrands and a conjecture of Šverák
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Polycrystalline configurations that maximize electrical resistivity
- Bi-convexity and bi-martingales
- An algebraic characterization of quasi-convex functions
- On functional separately convex hulls
- Non-compact lamination convex hulls.
- Quasi-convexity and the lower semicontinuity of multiple integrals
- Laminates and microstructure
- Rank-one convexity does not imply quasiconvexity
- Studying Nonlinear pde by Geometry in Matrix Space
- On directional convexity
This page was built for publication: Rank-one convex hulls in \(\mathbb R^{2\times 2}\)