296 research outputs found
Curve diffusion and straightening flows on parallel lines
In this paper, we study families of immersed curves
with free boundary supported
on parallel lines
evolving by the curve diffusion flow and the curve straightening flow. The
evolving curves are orthogonal to the boundary and satisfy a no-flux condition.
We give estimates and monotonicity on the normalised oscillation of curvature,
yielding global results for the flows.Comment: 35 pages, 3 figure
Mean curvature flow with free boundary outside a hypersphere
The purpose of this paper is twofold: firstly, to establish sufficient
conditions under which the mean curvature flow supported on a hypersphere with
exterior Dirichlet boundary exists globally in time and converges to a minimal
surface, and secondly, to illustrate the application of Killing vector fields
in the preservation of graphicality for the mean curvature flow with free
boundary. To this end we focus on the mean curvature flow of a topological
annulus with inner boundary meeting a standard n-sphere in \R^{n+1}
perpendicularly and outer boundary fixed to an (n-1)-sphere with radius R>1 at
a fixed height h. We call this the \emph{sphere problem}. Our work is set in
the context of graphical mean curvature flow with either symmetry or mean
concavity/convexity restrictions. For rotationally symmetric initial data we
obtain, depending on the exact configuration of the initial graph, either long
time existence and convergence to a minimal hypersurface with boundary or the
development of a finite-time curvature singularity. With reflectively symmetric
initial data we are able to use Killing vector fields to preserve graphicality
of the flow and uniformly bound the mean curvature pointwise along the flow.
Finally we prove that the mean curvature flow of an initially mean
concave/convex graphical surface exists globally in time and converges to a
piece of a minimal surface.Comment: 23 page
On the curve diffusion flow of closed plane curves
In this paper we consider the steepest descent -gradient flow of the
length functional for immersed plane curves, known as the curve diffusion flow.
It is known that under this flow there exist both initially immersed curves
which develop at least one singularity in finite time and initially embedded
curves which self-intersect in finite time. We prove that under the flow closed
curves with initial data close to a round circle in the sense of normalised
oscillation of curvature exist for all time and converge exponentially
fast to a round circle. This implies that for a sufficiently large `waiting
time' the evolving curves are strictly convex. We provide an optimal estimate
for this waiting time, which gives a quantified feeling for the magnitude to
which the maximum principle fails. We are also able to control the maximum of
the multiplicity of the curve along the evolution. A corollary of this estimate
is that initially embedded curves satisfying the hypotheses of the global
existence theorem remain embedded. Finally, as an application we obtain a
rigidity statement for closed planar curves with winding number one.Comment: accepted for publication on 15/01/12 in Ann. Mat. Pura Appl. (4
Concentration-compactness and finite-time singularities for Chen's flow
Chen's flow is a fourth-order curvature flow motivated by the spectral
decomposition of immersions, a program classically pushed by B.-Y. Chen since
the 1970s. In curvature flow terms the flow sits at the critical level of
scaling together with the most popular extrinsic fourth-order curvature flow,
the Willmore and surface diffusion flows. Unlike them however the famous Chen
conjecture indicates that there should be no stationary nonminimal data, and so
in particular the flow should drive all closed submanifolds to singularities.
We investigate this idea, proving that (1) closed data becomes extinct in
finite time in all dimensions and for any codimension; (2) singularities are
characterised by concentration of curvature in for intrinsic dimension and any codimension (a Lifespan Theorem); and (3) for and
in one codimension only, there exists an explicit small constant
such that if the norm of the tracefree curvature is
initially smaller than , the flow remains smooth until it
shrinks to a point, and that the blowup of that point is an embedded smooth
round sphere.Comment: 48 page
The polyharmonic heat flow of closed plane curves
In this paper we consider the polyharmonic heat flow of a closed curve in the
plane. Our main result is that closed initial data with initially small
normalised oscillation of curvature and isoperimetric defect flows
exponentially fast in the C^infty-topology to a simple circle. Our results
yield a characterisation of the total amount of time during which the flow is
not strictly convex, quantifying in a sense the failure of the maximum
principle.Comment: 23 page
On a curvature flow model for embryonic epidermal wound healing
The paper studies a curvature flow linked to the physical phenomenon of wound
closure. Under the flow we show that a closed, initially convex or
close-to-convex curve shrinks to a round point in finite time. We also study
the singularity, showing that the singularity profile after continuous
rescaling is that of a circle. We additionally give a maximal time estimate,
with an application to the classification of blowups.Comment: 43 page
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