The behavior of an elastic curve bound to a surface will reflect the geometry
of its environment. This may occur in an obvious way: the curve may deform
freely along directions tangent to the surface, but not along the surface
normal. However, even if the energy itself is symmetric in the curve's geodesic
and normal curvatures, which control these modes, very distinct roles are
played by the two. If the elastic curve binds preferentially on one side, or is
itself assembled on the surface, not only would one expect the bending moduli
associated with the two modes to differ, binding along specific directions,
reflected in spontaneous values of these curvatures, may be favored. The shape
equations describing the equilibrium states of a surface curve described by an
elastic energy accommodating environmental factors will be identified by
adapting the method of Lagrange multipliers to the Darboux frame associated
with the curve. The forces transmitted to the surface along the surface normal
will be determined. Features associated with a number of different energies,
both of physical relevance and of mathematical interest, are described. The
conservation laws associated with trajectories on surface geometries exhibiting
continuous symmetries are also examined.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figure