Difference between revisions of "Dupin cyclide"
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− | A surface for which both families of curvature lines consist of circles, so that it is a special case of a [[Canal surface|canal surface]]. Both sheets of the focal set of a Dupin cyclide degenerate to curves, | + | <!-- |
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+ | $#C+1 = 8 : ~/encyclopedia/old_files/data/D034/D.0304170 Dupin cyclide | ||
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+ | A surface for which both families of curvature lines consist of circles, so that it is a special case of a [[Canal surface|canal surface]]. Both sheets of the focal set of a Dupin cyclide degenerate to curves, $ \Gamma _ {1} $ | ||
+ | and $ \Gamma _ {2} $, | ||
+ | which are curves of the second order. There are three types of Dupin cyclides. | ||
1) The evolutes are an ellipse and a hyperbola; the radius vector of the corresponding Dupin cyclide is | 1) The evolutes are an ellipse and a hyperbola; the radius vector of the corresponding Dupin cyclide is | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | x = | ||
+ | \frac{V b \sin u }{U + V } | ||
+ | ,\ y = | ||
+ | \frac{U b \sinh v }{U + V } | ||
+ | , | ||
+ | $$ | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | z = | ||
+ | \frac{V a \cos u + U c \cosh v }{U + V } | ||
+ | , | ||
+ | $$ | ||
where | where | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | U = c \cos u + d ,\ V = - a \cosh v - d ,\ d = | ||
+ | \textrm{ const } . | ||
+ | $$ | ||
2) The evolutes are focal parabolas; the radius vector is | 2) The evolutes are focal parabolas; the radius vector is | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | x = | ||
+ | \frac{Vu}{U + V } | ||
+ | ,\ y = | ||
+ | \frac{Uv}{U + V } | ||
+ | , | ||
+ | $$ | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | z = | ||
+ | \frac{V ( 2 u ^ {2} - p ^ {2} ) - U ( 2 v ^ {2} - p ^ {2} ) }{U p ( U + V ) } | ||
+ | , | ||
+ | $$ | ||
where | where | ||
− | + | $$ | |
+ | U = | ||
+ | \frac{2 u ^ {2} + p + q }{u p } | ||
+ | ,\ V = | ||
+ | \frac{2 v ^ {2} + p ^ {2} - | ||
+ | q ^ {2} }{u p } | ||
+ | ,\ q = \textrm{ const } . | ||
+ | $$ | ||
3) The evolutes are a circle and a straight line; the corresponding Dupin cyclide is a [[Torus|torus]]. | 3) The evolutes are a circle and a straight line; the corresponding Dupin cyclide is a [[Torus|torus]]. | ||
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====References==== | ====References==== | ||
<table><TR><TD valign="top">[1]</TD> <TD valign="top"> Ch. Dupin, "Développements de géométrie" , Paris (1813)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[2]</TD> <TD valign="top"> F. Klein, "Vorlesungen über höhere Geometrie" , Springer (1926)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[3]</TD> <TD valign="top"> D. Hilbert, S.E. Cohn-Vossen, "Anschauliche Geometrie" , Springer (1932)</TD></TR></table> | <table><TR><TD valign="top">[1]</TD> <TD valign="top"> Ch. Dupin, "Développements de géométrie" , Paris (1813)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[2]</TD> <TD valign="top"> F. Klein, "Vorlesungen über höhere Geometrie" , Springer (1926)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[3]</TD> <TD valign="top"> D. Hilbert, S.E. Cohn-Vossen, "Anschauliche Geometrie" , Springer (1932)</TD></TR></table> | ||
− | |||
− | |||
====Comments==== | ====Comments==== |
Latest revision as of 19:36, 5 June 2020
A surface for which both families of curvature lines consist of circles, so that it is a special case of a canal surface. Both sheets of the focal set of a Dupin cyclide degenerate to curves, $ \Gamma _ {1} $
and $ \Gamma _ {2} $,
which are curves of the second order. There are three types of Dupin cyclides.
1) The evolutes are an ellipse and a hyperbola; the radius vector of the corresponding Dupin cyclide is
$$ x = \frac{V b \sin u }{U + V } ,\ y = \frac{U b \sinh v }{U + V } , $$
$$ z = \frac{V a \cos u + U c \cosh v }{U + V } , $$
where
$$ U = c \cos u + d ,\ V = - a \cosh v - d ,\ d = \textrm{ const } . $$
2) The evolutes are focal parabolas; the radius vector is
$$ x = \frac{Vu}{U + V } ,\ y = \frac{Uv}{U + V } , $$
$$ z = \frac{V ( 2 u ^ {2} - p ^ {2} ) - U ( 2 v ^ {2} - p ^ {2} ) }{U p ( U + V ) } , $$
where
$$ U = \frac{2 u ^ {2} + p + q }{u p } ,\ V = \frac{2 v ^ {2} + p ^ {2} - q ^ {2} }{u p } ,\ q = \textrm{ const } . $$
3) The evolutes are a circle and a straight line; the corresponding Dupin cyclide is a torus.
Dupin cyclides are algebraic surfaces of order four in the cases 1) and 3) above, and of order three in the case 2).
References
[1] | Ch. Dupin, "Développements de géométrie" , Paris (1813) |
[2] | F. Klein, "Vorlesungen über höhere Geometrie" , Springer (1926) |
[3] | D. Hilbert, S.E. Cohn-Vossen, "Anschauliche Geometrie" , Springer (1932) |
Comments
Originally, a Dupin cycle was defined more geometrically as the envelope of a family of spheres tangent to three fixed spheres. Every Dupin cyclide can be obtained from the following three examples by inversion in a suitable sphere: a torus of revolution, a circular cylinder and a circular cone.
The Dupin cyclides are surfaces of the second order in pentaspherical coordinates and have, moreover, two equal axis. For more on Dupin cyclides see [a2], pp. 359-360 and [a3], pp. 355-356; 441. A remarkable property of cyclides is the fact that they carry four families of circles.
The natural generalization of the Dupin cyclides to higher dimensions are the so-called Dupin-hypersurfaces (see [a1]).
References
[a1] | T.E. Cecil, P.J. Ryan, "Tight and taut immersions of manifolds" , Pitman (1985) |
[a2] | M. Berger, "Geometry" , II , Springer (1987) |
[a3] | M. Berger, B. Gostiaux, "Differential geometry: manifolds, curves, and surfaces" , Springer (1988) (Translated from French) |
[a4] | W. Blaschke, K. Leichtweiss, "Elementare Differentialgeometrie" , Springer (1973) |
Dupin cyclide. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Dupin_cyclide&oldid=13429