Abstract:
An algorithm using a suggested ansatz is presented to reduce the area of a surface spanned by a finite
number of boundary curves by doing a variational improvement in the initial surface of which area
is to be reduced. The anzatz we consider, consists of original surface plus a variational parameter
multiplying the unit normal to the surface, numerator part of its mean curvature function and a
function of its parameters chosen such that its variation at boundary points is zero. We minimize of
its rms mean curvature and for the same boundary decrease the area of the surface we generate. We
do a complete numerical implementation for the boundary of surfaces, a) when the minimal surface
is known, namely a hemiellipsoid spanned by an elliptic curve (in this case the area is reduced for the
elliptic boundary by as much as 23 percent of original surface), and b) a hump like surface spanned
by four straight lines in the same plane- in this case the area is reduced by about 37.9141 percent
of original surface along with the case when the corresponding minimal surface is unknown, namely
a bilinearly interpolating surface spanned by four bounding straight lines lying in different planes.
(The four boundary lines of the bilinear interpolation can model the initial and final configurations
of re-arranging strings). This is a special case of Coons patch, a surface frequently encountered
in surface modelling- Area reduced for the bilinear interpolation is 0.8 percent of original surface,
with no further decrease possible at least for the ansatz we used, suggesting that it is already a
near-minimal surface. As a Coons patch is defined only for a boundary composed of four analytical
curves, we extend the range of applicability of a Coons patch by telling how to write it for a boundary
composed of an arbitrary number of boundary curves. We partition the curves in a clear and natural
way into four groups and then join all the curves in each group into one analytic curve by using
representations of the unit step function including a fully analytic suggested by us. Having a well
parameterized Coons patch spanning a boundary composed of an arbitrary number of curves, we
do calculations on it that are motivated by variational calculus that give a better optimized and
possibly more smooth surface. A complete numerical implementation for a boundary composed of
five straight lines is provided (that can model a string breaking) and get about 0.82 percent decrease
of the area in this case as well. Given the demonstrated ability of our optimization algorithm to
reduce area by as much as 37.9141 percent for a spanning surface not close to being a minimal
x
xi
surface, this much smaller fractional decrease suggests that the Coons patch for f ive line boundary
we have been able to write is also close to being a minimal surface. That is it is a near-minimal
surface. This work compares the reduction in area for near-minimal surfaces (bilinear interpolation
spanned by four boundary lines and a Coons patch whose boundary is rewritten for a boundary
composed of five lines) with the surfaces whose minimal surfaces are already known (a hemiellipsoid
spanned by an elliptic disc and a hump like surface spanned by four straight lines lying in the
same plane) and we have been able to calculate numerically worked out differential geometry related
quantities like the metric, unit normal, root mean square of mean curvature and root mean square
of Gaussian curvature for the surface obtained through calculus of variations with reduced area.