Vineyard illustration

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The Weingarten mapping (after the German mathematician Julius Weingarten ), also known as the shape operator , is a function from the theory of surfaces in three-dimensional Euclidean space ( ), a sub-area of ​​classical differential geometry .

preparation

Let the parametric representation be a regular surface

given. Let it be at least twice continuously differentiable and at every point the derivative , a linear mapping from to , has full rank. The image of this linear mapping is then a two-dimensional subspace of the , the tangent space of the surface in the point . The image vectors are thought to be attached to the point . The tangent space is defined by the two vectors

and

stretched. (Here and denote the unit vectors of the standard basis des .)

The unit normal at the point of the surface can be calculated using the vector product :

Thus there is a differentiable mapping from the parameter area into the vector space . You think of the image vector attached to the point . The derivative in the point is a linear mapping from to . From the condition that there is a unit vector, it follows that for each pair of parameters the image of the image lies in the tangent space of the surface in the point and thus in the image of the image . Since is injective, the inverse mapping exists as mapping on the tangent space in the point .

definition

The vineyard mapping can now be defined as a linear mapping in the parameter area (classic view) or on the tangential space (modern view).

In the parameter area

The figure is the on the tangent of the surface at the point from. The image maps this tangential space back onto the . The resulting linear mapping through concatenation and sign change

from to is called vineyard illustration at the point .

On the surface

The figure shows a vector of the tangent space of the surface at the point in the . The image maps the image vector back into the tangential space. The resulting linear mapping through concatenation and sign change

maps the tangential space on itself at the point and is called vineyard mapping at the point . So it applies

for .

Coordinate representation

The two versions of the vineyard map are defined on completely different vector spaces. However one chooses the parameter area the standard basis and in the tangent the base , so tune the associated mapping matrices

match. You are through the equations

characterized. In Einstein's summation convention shear , with , , , and the omission of the argument:

Connection with the second fundamental form

For each parameter pair , the first fundamental form is a scalar product im and the second fundamental form is a symmetrical bilinear form. These are connected by the vineyard map as follows: The following applies to vectors

.

Einstein's summation convention applies to the associated matrix representations

and

properties

The main curvatures are eigenvalues ​​of the vineyard map
  • The Weingarten mapping is self-adjoint with respect to the first fundamental form , that is, for all of them , there is therefore a basis of eigenvectors of which is orthonormal with respect to each point of the surface .

  • The directions of the eigenvectors are called main directions of curvature .
  • The eigenvalues ​​of the vineyard map indicate the main curvatures of the surface.
  • For a vector describes the change of the surface normal in this direction at this point.
  • The vineyard map is the derivation of the Gauss map .

example

Following the example from the articles first fundamental form and second fundamental form , the surface of a sphere is again considered from the radius . This area is back through

parameterized.

The matrix representation of the first fundamental form consists of the components , , and .

The matrix representation of the second fundamental form consists of the components , , and .

Both are linked by the equation . By writing out Einstein's sum convention, this yields the following four equations:

By inserting the components of the matrix representations, the components of the vineyard map are obtained:

Alternatively, the explicit formula could have been used. To do this, however, the matrix of the first fundamental form would have to be inverted in order to obtain the.

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