A Bernstein type theorem for entire Willmore graphs
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1935490
DOI10.1007/s12220-011-9264-2zbMath1269.53010MaRDI QIDQ1935490
Publication date: 18 February 2013
Published in: The Journal of Geometric Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12220-011-9264-2
53C42: Differential geometry of immersions (minimal, prescribed curvature, tight, etc.)
53A05: Surfaces in Euclidean and related spaces
35J30: Higher-order elliptic equations
Related Items
Willmore Surfaces in Three-Dimensional Simply Isotropic Spaces $$\mathbb {I}_3^1$$, Classification of Willmore surfaces with vanishing Gaussian curvature, Remarks on a Bernstein type theorem for entire Willmore graphs in \(\mathbb R^3\), Radially symmetric solutions to the graphic Willmore surface equation, The Willmore functional of surfaces, Radial solutions of a fourth order Hamiltonian stationary equation, Sufficient conditions for Willmore immersions in \(\mathbb R^3\) to be minimal surfaces, Some remarks on Willmore surfaces embedded in \(\mathbb R^3\)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A duality theorem for Willmore surfaces
- Chord-arc surfaces with small constant. I
- Chord-arc surfaces with small constant. II: Good parametrizations
- Analysis aspects of Willmore surfaces
- Calibrated geometries
- Complete surfaces of finite total curvature
- Complete surfaces with finite total curvature
- Surfaces with generalized second fundamental form in \(L^ 2\) are Lipschitz manifolds
- The Bernstein problem for affine maximal hypersurfaces
- The Willmore flow with small initial energy.
- Removability of point singularities of Willmore surfaces
- Geometric conditions and existence of bi-Lipschitz parameterizations
- Branch points of Willmore surfaces
- Error analysis of a finite element method for the Willmore flow of graphs
- Complete minimal surfaces in \(S^ 3\)
- Boundary value problems for the one-dimensional Willmore equation
- Hypersurfaces in R n Whose Unit Normal has Small BMO Norm
- Total Curvatures and Minimal Areas of Complete Open Surfaces
- Geodesic Parallel Coordinates in the Large