Weierstrass parameterization facilities fabrication of periodic minimal surfaces
Let ƒ and g be functions on either the entire complex plane or the unit disk, where g is meromorphic and ƒ is analytic, such that wherever g has a pole of order m, f has a zero of order 2m (or equivalently, such that the product ƒg2 is holomorphic), and let c1, c2, c3 be constants. Then the surface with coordinates (x1,x2,x3) is minimal, where the xk are defined using the real part of a complex integral, as follows:
The converse is also true: every nonplanar minimal surface defined over a simply connected domain can be given a parametrization of this type.[1]
The Weierstrass-Enneper model defines a minimal surface () on a complex plane (). Let (the complex plane as the space), we write the Jacobian matrix of the surface as a column of complex entries:
Where and are holomorphic functions of .
The Jacobian represents the two orthogonal tangent vectors of the surface:[2]
The surface normal is given by
The Jacobian leads to a number of important properties: , , , . The proofs can be found in Sharma's essay: The Weierstrass representation always gives a minimal surface.[3] The derivatives can be used to construct the first fundamental form matrix:
Choosing the functions and , a one parameter family of minimal surfaces is obtained.
Choosing the parameters of the surface as :
At the extremes, the surface is a catenoid or a helicoid . Otherwise, represents a mixing angle. The resulting surface, with domain chosen to prevent self-intersection, is a catenary rotated around the axis in a helical fashion.
A catenary that spans periodic points on a helix, subsequently rotated along the helix to produce a minimal surface.The fundamental domain (C) and the 3D surfaces. The continuous surfaces are made of copies of the fundamental patch (R3)
Lines of curvature
One can rewrite each element of second fundamental matrix as a function of and , for example
And consequently we can simplify the second fundamental form matrix as
Lines of curvature make a quadrangulation of the domain
One of its eigenvectors is
which represents the principal direction in the complex domain.[6] Therefore, the two principal directions in the space turn out to be
^Dierkes, U.; Hildebrandt, S.; Küster, A.; Wohlrab, O. (1992). Minimal surfaces. Vol. vol. I. Springer. p. 108. ISBN3-540-53169-6. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
^Andersson, S.; Hyde, S. T.; Larsson, K.; Lidin, S. (1988). "Minimal Surfaces and Structures: From Inorganic and Metal Crystals to Cell Membranes and Biopolymers". Chem. Rev. 88 (1): 221–242. doi:10.1021/cr00083a011.
^Sharma, R. (2012). "The Weierstrass Representation always gives a minimal surface". arXiv preprint. arXiv:1208.5689.
^Lawden, D. F. (2011). Elliptic Functions and Applications. Applied Mathematical Sciences. Vol. vol. 80. Berlin: Springer. ISBN978-1-4419-3090-3. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
^Abbena, E.; Salamon, S.; Gray, A. (2006). "Minimal Surfaces via Complex Variables". Modern Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces with Mathematica. Boca Raton: CRC Press. pp. 719–766. ISBN1-58488-448-7.
^Hua, H.; Jia, T. (2018). "Wire cut of double-sided minimal surfaces". The Visual Computer. 34 (6–8): 985–995. doi:10.1007/s00371-018-1548-0.