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Figure 1. The Enneper surfaceFigure 2. The Enneper surface in Figure 1 has been rotated 30° around the +z axis.Figure 3. The Enneper surface in Figure 1 has been rotated 60° around the +z axis.
Implicitization methods of algebraic geometry can be used to find out that the points in the Enneper surface given above satisfy the degree-9 polynomial equation
Dually, the tangent plane at the point with given parameters is where
Its coefficients satisfy the implicit degree-6 polynomial equation
It can be generalized to higher order rotational symmetries by using the Weierstrass–Enneper parameterization for integer k>1.[3] It can also be generalized to higher dimensions; Enneper-like surfaces are known to exist in for n up to 7.[7]
References
^J.C.C. Nitsche, "Vorlesungen über Minimalflächen" , Springer (1975)