CMC Surfaces

Delaunay Surfaces

Constant mean curvature cylinders in euclidean 3-space

The Delaunay surfaces, being surfaces of revolution, are the simplest constant mean curvature cylinders [1]. Delaunay surfaces lie in associate families of twizzlers, which have screw-motion symmetry.

The associate family of a Delaunay surface
A flow through the one-parameter family of Delaunay unduloids and nodoids.

References

  1. C. Delaunay, Sur la surface de révolution dont la courbure moyenne est constante, J. Math. Pures et Appl. Série 1 6 (1841), 309-320 link.

Roulettes of Conics

Profile curves of Delaunay surfaces

The roulette of a conic, traced out by its focus, is the profile curve of a Delaunay surface [1]. Roulettes of ellipses make unduloids, and those of hyperbola make nodoids. The major and minor axes of the conic determine the neck and bulge sizes of the Delaunay surface. The roulettes in these flipbooks are traced out at constant speed.

Roulette of an ellipse. (Drag mouse on image.)
Roulette of a hyperbola. (Drag mouse on image.)

References

  1. M. Kilian, On the associated family of Delaunay surfaces, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 132 (2004), no. 10, 3075—3082 [2063129].

Bubbletons

Constant mean curvature cylinders in euclidean 3-space

Delaunay bubbletons are constructed by dressing a Delaunay surface with a product of simple factor dressings [3,1,2].

A two-lobed bubble collides with a 3-lobed bubble.

References

  1. M. Melko and I. Sterling, Application of soliton theory to the construction of pseudospherical surfaces in R3, Ann. Global Anal. Geom. 11 (1993), no. 1, 65—107 [1201412].
  2. M. Melko and I. Sterling, Integrable systems, harmonic maps and the classical theory of surfaces, Harmonic maps and integrable systems, Aspects Math., E23, Friedr. Vieweg, Braunschweig (1994), 129—144 [1264184].
  3. I. Sterling and H. Wente, Existence and classification of constant mean curvature multibubbletons of finite and infinite type, Indiana Univ. Math. J. 42 (1993), no. 4, 1239—1266 [1266092].

Bifurcating Nodoids

Constant mean curvature cylinders in euclidean 3-space

These constant mean curvature cylinders [3,2] have spectral genus two like the Wente tori, though only one period is closed. Their metric is given in terms of Jacobi elliptic functions [1,4].

References

  1. U. Abresch, Constant mean curvature tori in terms of elliptic functions, J. Reine Angew. Math. 374 (1987), 169—192 [876223].
  2. K. Grosse-Brauckmann, Bifurcations of the nodoids, Oberwolfach Report 24/2007, Progress in surface theory (2007).
  3. R. Mazzeo and F. Pacard, Bifurcating nodoids, Topology and geometry: commemorating SISTAG, Contemp. Math., Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI (2002), 169—186 [1941630].
  4. R. Walter, Explicit examples to the H-problem of Heinz Hopf, Geom. Dedicata 23 (1987), no. 2, 187—213 [892400].

Smyth Surfaces

Constant mean curvature cylinders in euclidean 3-space

Smyth surfaces are constant mean curvature surfaces with a one-parameter metric symmetry [1]. Also known as Mr and Mrs Bubble, Smyth surfaces come in many shapes and sizes, with varying numbers of legs. A Delaunay can be surgically attached to the head to make cylinders.

References

  1. B. Smyth, A generalization of a theorem of Delaunay on constant mean curvature surfaces, Statistical thermodynamics and differential geometry of microstructured materials (Minneapolis, MN, 1991), IMA Vol. Math. Appl., Springer, New York (1993), 123—130 [1226924].

Perturbed Delaunay Surfaces

Constant mean curvature cylinders in euclidean 3-space

Perturbed Delaunay surfaces with one Smyth end and one Delaunay end.