Willmore conjecture

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Short description: Lower bound on the integrated squared mean curvature of a torus
The torus with minimal Willmore energy, with major radius 2 and minor radius 1[1]

In differential geometry, the Willmore conjecture is a lower bound on the Willmore energy of a torus. It is named after the England mathematician Tom Willmore, who conjectured it in 1965.[2] A proof by Fernando Codá Marques and André Neves was announced in 2012 and published in 2014.[1][3]

Willmore energy

Main page: Willmore energy

Let v : M → R3 be a smooth immersion of a compact, orientable surface. Giving M the Riemannian metric induced by v, let H : M → R be the mean curvature (the arithmetic mean of the principal curvatures κ1 and κ2 at each point). In this notation, the Willmore energy W(M) of M is given by

[math]\displaystyle{ W(M) = \int_M H^2 \, dA. }[/math]

It is not hard to prove that the Willmore energy satisfies W(M) ≥ 4π, with equality if and only if M is an embedded round sphere.

Statement

Calculation of W(M) for a few examples suggests that there should be a better bound than W(M) ≥ 4π for surfaces with genus g(M) > 0. In particular, calculation of W(M) for tori with various symmetries led Willmore to propose in 1965 the following conjecture, which now bears his name

For every smooth immersed torus M in R3, W(M) ≥ 2π2.

In 1982, Peter Wai-Kwong Li and Shing-Tung Yau proved the conjecture in the non-embedded case, showing that if [math]\displaystyle{ f:\Sigma\to S^3 }[/math] is an immersion of a compact surface, which is not an embedding, then W(M) is at least 8π.[4]

In 2012, Fernando Codá Marques and André Neves proved the conjecture in the embedded case, using the Almgren–Pitts min-max theory of minimal surfaces.[3][1] Martin Schmidt claimed a proof in 2002,[5] but it was not accepted for publication in any peer-reviewed mathematical journal (although it did not contain a proof of the Willmore conjecture, he proved some other important conjectures in it). Prior to the proof of Marques and Neves, the Willmore conjecture had already been proved for many special cases, such as tube tori (by Willmore himself), and for tori of revolution (by Langer & Singer).[6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Marques, Fernando C.; Neves, André (2014). "Min-max theory and the Willmore conjecture". Annals of Mathematics 179: 683–782. doi:10.4007/annals.2014.179.2.6. 
  2. Willmore, Thomas J. (1965). "Note on embedded surfaces". Analele Ştiinţifice ale Universităţii "Al. I. Cuza" din Iaşi, Secţiunea I a Matematică 11B: 493–496. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Frank Morgan (2012) "Math Finds the Best Doughnut", The Huffington Post
  4. Li, Peter; Yau, Shing Tung (1982). "A new conformal invariant and its applications to the Willmore conjecture and the first eigenvalue of compact surfaces". Inventiones Mathematicae 69 (2): 269-291. doi:10.1007/BF01399507. 
  5. Schmidt, Martin U. (2002). "A proof of the Willmore conjecture". arXiv:math/0203224.
  6. Langer, Joel; Singer, David (1984). "Curves in the hyperbolic plane and mean curvature of tori in 3-space". The Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 16 (5): 531–534. doi:10.1112/blms/16.5.531. 

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