University of Wollongong
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Contracting convex hypersurfaces by curvature

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 09:15 authored by Ben Andrews, James McCoy, Yu Zheng
We consider compact convex hypersurfaces contracting by functions of their curvature. Under the mean curvature flow, uniformly convex smooth initial hypersurfaces evolve to remain smooth and uniformly convex, and contract to points after finite time. The same holds if the initial data is only weakly convex or non-smooth, and the limiting shape at the final time is spherical.We provide a surprisingly large family of flows for which such results fail, by a variety of mechanisms: Uniformly convex hypersurfaces may become non-convex, and smooth ones may develop curvature singularities; even where this does not occur, nonuniformly convex regions and singular parts in the initial hypersurface may persist, including flat sides, ridges of infinite curvature, or ‘cylindrical’ regions where some of the principal curvatures vanish; such cylindrical regions may persist even if the speed is positive, and in such cases the hypersurface may even collapse to a line segment or higher-dimensional disc rather than to a point. We provide sufficient conditions for these various disasters to occur,

Funding

Singularities and surgery in geometric evolution equations

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Andrews, B., McCoy, J. & Zheng, Y. (2013). Contracting convex hypersurfaces by curvature. Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations, 47 (3-4), 611-665.

Journal title

Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations

Volume

47

Issue

3/04/2024

Pagination

611-665

Language

English

RIS ID

73432

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