<< Chapter < Page | Chapter >> Page > |
It is highly recommended that the reader familiarize themselves with [2] before approaching this module. Both the problems and the techniques used to solve them will draw heavily from that work. Wewill first answer questions previously raised concerning the unit cylinder before moving on to the study of similar vector fields onthe torus.
First, we turn our attention to the unit cylinder (with radius and height 1) for futher investigation on [2] work.
We borrow heavily from [2] . Our surface, the unit cylinder with radius may be parameterized as . Our vector field is parameterized as and the corresponding energy equation on the cylinder is
which, of course, is a specific case of the general equation
As [2] shows, the minimizing must satisfy
We recall and restate Theorem 5 from [2] :
Let a surface with radius be given. Suppose that the boundary conditions of a vector field on do not depend on : that is, for all and constant . The function which minimizes energy given constant boundary conditions does not depend on . In other words, the vector field described by is constant along every ”horizontal slice" of the surface.
We now aim to show that such a unique energy-minimizing does in fact exist on this cylinder.
Let and be “constant” boundary data on the bottom and top of the unit cylinder respectively. Then the minimizer exists.
Let . Let be the following the set of smooth functions:
Suppose that are a sequence of unit tangent vector fields with . Then we can replace this sequence by another sequence of vector fields so that when we write the using an angle fucntion , is constant in and so that the energies still approach .
Suppose that depends on . Then there exists a -independent such that . thus implies .
Notification Switch
Would you like to follow the 'The art of the pfug' conversation and receive update notifications?