Finite time singularities for the locally constrained Willmore flow of surfaces (Q503447)

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Finite time singularities for the locally constrained Willmore flow of surfaces
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    Finite time singularities for the locally constrained Willmore flow of surfaces (English)
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    12 January 2017
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    The authors study the locally constrained Willmore flow of surfaces, which is the steepest descent \(L^2\)-gradient flow of the following locally constrained Willmore functional \[ \mathcal{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}(f)=\frac 14\int_{\Sigma}H^2d\mu+\lambda_1\mu(\Sigma)+\lambda_2\mathrm{Vol}(\Sigma), \] where \(f:\Sigma\to\mathbb{R}^3\) gives the smooth immersion, \(\lambda_1,\lambda_2\) are real numbers, \(\mu(\Sigma)\) denotes the surface area and \(\mathrm{Vol}(\Sigma)\) denotes the signed enclosed volume. The Euler-Lagrange operator of \( \mathcal{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}\) is given by \[ \mathbf{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}(f)=\Delta H+H|{A^o}|^2-2\lambda_1H-2\lambda_2. \] The locally constrained Willmore flow is then defined as \[ \begin{cases}\frac{\partial f}{\partial t}=-\mathbf{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}(f)\nu,\\ f(\cdot,0)=f_0(\cdot), \end{cases}\tag{CW} \] When \(\lambda_1=\lambda_2=0\), \(\mathcal{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}(f)\) and the flow (CW) reduce to the well-known Willmore functional and Willmore flow. The main purpose of this paper is to study the flow (CW) with initial data that has small \(\mathcal{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}\) energy. The authors show that there exists an \(\epsilon>0\) depending only on \(\lambda_1,\lambda_2\) such that if \(\mathrm{Vol}(\Sigma_0)>0\) and \[ \mathcal{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}(f_0)\leq 4\pi+\epsilon, \tag{\(*\)} \] then the maximum existence time \(T\) is finite and satisfies \[ T<\frac 1{4\pi\lambda_1^2}\mathcal{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}(f_0)+1. \] Moreover, the flow \(f(\Sigma,t)\) shrinks to a round point as \(t\to T\). To prove this result, the authors use some idea in recent work on the Willmore flow due to Kuwert and Schätzle. Since the flow is of fourth order and may develop self-intersections, the authors first prove that if the initial data has energy \(\mathcal{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}\) satisfies (\(*\)), then the embeddedness is preserved along the flow (CW). Then the energy \(\mathcal{W}_{\lambda_1,\lambda_2}\) has a good control due to its monotonicity. Since the maximum principle is not applicable for the flow (CW), the authors instead attack this problem by deriving integral curvature estimates via the interpolation inequalities, divergence theorem and the Michael-Simon Sobolev inequalities. The asymptotical behavior of the flow as \(t\to T\) is proved by the standard blow up analysis and relies on a concentration-compactness alternative that classifies the finite singular times as being local concentrations of the curvature in \(L^2\).
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    global differential geometry
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    fourth-order flow
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    geometric analysis
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    parabolic partial differential equations
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