Parallel surfaces
Diffeomorphic equi-oriented surfaces and F_2 having parallel tangent planes at corresponding points and such that the distance h between corresponding points of F_1 and F_2 is constant and equal to that between the corresponding tangent planes. The position vectors \mathbf r_1 and \mathbf r_2 of two parallel surfaces F_1 and F_2 are connected by a relation \mathbf r_2-\mathbf r_1=h\mathbf n, where \mathbf n is a unit normal vector that is the same for F_1 at r_1 and F_2 at r_2.
Thus, one can define a one-parameter family F_h of surfaces parallel to a given F=F_0, where F_h is regular for sufficiently small values of h for which
w(h)=1-2Hh+Kh^2>0.
To the values of the roots h_1 and h_2 of the equation w(h)=0 there correspond two surfaces F_{h_1} and F_{h_2} that are evolutes of F, so that parallel surfaces have a common evolute (cf. Evolute (surface)). The mean curvature H_h and the Gaussian curvature K_h of a surface F_h parallel to F are connected with the corresponding quantities H and K of F by the relations
H_h=\frac{H-Kh}{w}(h),\quad K_h=\frac Kw(h);
lines of curvature of parallel surfaces correspond to each other, so that between them there is a Combescour correspondence, which is a special case of a Peterson correspondence.
Comments
For a linear family of closed convex parallel surfaces (depending linearly on a parameter \epsilon>0) the Steiner formula holds: The volume of the point set bounded by them is a polynomial of degree 3 in \epsilon. An analogous result holds for arbitrary dimensions. The Steiner formula is a special case of formulas for general polynomials in Minkowski's theory of mixed volumes, and, even more general, in the theory of valuations.
For references see Parallel lines.
Parallel surfaces. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Parallel_surfaces&oldid=32710