Pseudosphere
In geometry, a pseudosphere is a surface with constant negative Gaussian curvature.
A pseudosphere of radius R is a surface in having curvature −1/R2 at each point. Its name comes from the analogy with the sphere of radius R, which is a surface of curvature 1/R2. The term was introduced by Eugenio Beltrami in his 1868 paper on models of hyperbolic geometry.[1]
Tractroid
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The same surface can be also described as the result of revolving a tractrix about its asymptote. For this reason the pseudosphere is also called a tractroid. As an example, the (half) pseudosphere (with radius 1) is the surface of revolution of the tractrix parametrized by[2]
It is a singular space (the equator is a singularity), but away from the singularities, it has constant negative Gaussian curvature and therefore is locally isometric to a hyperbolic plane.
The name "pseudosphere" comes about because it has a two-dimensional surface of constant negative Gaussian curvature, just as a sphere has a surface with constant positive Gaussian curvature. Just as the sphere has at every point a positively curved geometry of a dome the whole pseudosphere has at every point the negatively curved geometry of a saddle.
As early as 1693 Christiaan Huygens found that the volume and the surface area of the pseudosphere are finite,[3] despite the infinite extent of the shape along the axis of rotation. For a given edge radius R, the area is 4πR2 just as it is for the sphere, while the volume is 2/3πR3 and therefore half that of a sphere of that radius.[4][5]
The pseudosphere is an important geometric precursor to mathematical fabric arts and pedagogy.[6]
Universal covering space
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The half pseudosphere of curvature −1 is covered by the interior of a horocycle. In the Poincaré half-plane model one convenient choice is the portion of the half-plane with y ≥ 1.[7] Then the covering map is periodic in the x direction of period 2π, and takes the horocycles y = c to the meridians of the pseudosphere and the vertical geodesics x = c to the tractrices that generate the pseudosphere. This mapping is a local isometry, and thus exhibits the portion y ≥ 1 of the upper half-plane as the universal covering space of the pseudosphere. The precise mapping is
where
is the parametrization of the tractrix above.
Hyperboloid
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In some sources that use the hyperboloid model of the hyperbolic plane, the hyperboloid is referred to as a pseudosphere.[8] This usage of the word is because the hyperboloid can be thought of as a sphere of imaginary radius, embedded in a Minkowski space.
Pseudospherical surfaces
[edit]A pseudospherical surface is a generalization of the pseudosphere. A surface which is piecewise smoothly immersed in with constant negative curvature is a pseudospherical surface. The tractroid is the simplest example. Other examples include the Dini's surfaces, breather surfaces, and the Kuen surface.
Relation to solutions to the sine-Gordon equation
[edit]Pseudospherical surfaces can be constructed from solutions to the sine-Gordon equation.[9] A sketch proof starts with reparametrizing the tractroid with coordinates in which the Gauss–Codazzi equations can be rewritten as the sine-Gordon equation.
In particular, for the tractroid the Gauss–Codazzi equations are the sine-Gordon equation applied to the static soliton solution, so the Gauss–Codazzi equations are satisfied. In these coordinates the first and second fundamental forms are written in a way that makes clear the Gaussian curvature is −1 for any solution of the sine-Gordon equations.
Then any solution to the sine-Gordon equation can be used to specify a first and second fundamental form which satisfy the Gauss–Codazzi equations. There is then a theorem that any such set of initial data can be used to at least locally specify an immersed surface in .
A few examples of sine-Gordon solutions and their corresponding surface are given as follows:
- Static 1-soliton: pseudosphere
- Moving 1-soliton: Dini's surface
- Breather solution: Breather surface
- 2-soliton: Kuen surface
See also
[edit]- Hilbert's theorem (differential geometry)
- Dini's surface
- Gabriel's Horn
- Hyperboloid
- Hyperboloid structure
- Quasi-sphere
- Sine–Gordon equation
- Sphere
- Surface of revolution
References
[edit]- ^ Beltrami, Eugenio (1868). "Saggio sulla interpretazione della geometria non euclidea" [Essay on the interpretation of noneuclidean geometry]. Gior. Mat. (in Italian). 6: 248–312.
(Republished in Beltrami, Eugenio (1902). Opere Matematiche. Vol. 1. Milan: Ulrico Hoepli. XXIV, pp. 374–405. Translated into French as "Essai d'interprétation de la géométrie noneuclidéenne". Annales Scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure. Ser. 1. 6. Translated by J. Hoüel: 251–288. 1869. doi:10.24033/asens.60. EuDML 80724. Translated into English as "Essay on the interpretation of noneuclidean geometry" by John Stillwell, in Stillwell 1996, pp. 7–34.)
- ^ Bonahon, Francis (2009). Low-dimensional geometry: from Euclidean surfaces to hyperbolic knots. AMS Bookstore. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-8218-4816-6., Chapter 5, page 108
- ^ Stillwell, John (2010). Mathematics and Its History (revised, 3rd ed.). Springer Science & Business Media. p. 345. ISBN 978-1-4419-6052-8., extract of page 345
- ^ Le Lionnais, F. (2004). Great Currents of Mathematical Thought, Vol. II: Mathematics in the Arts and Sciences (2 ed.). Courier Dover Publications. p. 154. ISBN 0-486-49579-5., Chapter 40, page 154
- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Pseudosphere". MathWorld.
- ^ Roberts, Siobhan (15 January 2024). "The Crochet Coral Reef Keeps Spawning, Hyperbolically". The New York Times.
- ^ Thurston, William, Three-dimensional geometry and topology, vol. 1, Princeton University Press, p. 62.
- ^ Hasanov, Elman (2004), "A new theory of complex rays", IMA J. Appl. Math., 69 (6): 521–537, doi:10.1093/imamat/69.6.521, ISSN 1464-3634, archived from the original on 2013-04-15
- ^ Wheeler, Nicholas. "From Pseudosphere to sine-Gordon equation" (PDF). Retrieved 24 November 2022.
- Stillwell, John (1996). Sources of Hyperbolic Geometry. American Mathematical Society & London Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-0529-0.
- Henderson, D. W.; Taimina, D. (2006). "Experiencing Geometry: Euclidean and Non-Euclidean with History". Aesthetics and Mathematics (PDF). Springer-Verlag.
- Kasner, Edward; Newman, James (1940). Mathematics and the Imagination. Simon & Schuster. pp. 140, 145, 155.
External links
[edit]- Non Euclid
- Crocheting the Hyperbolic Plane: An Interview with David Henderson and Daina Taimina
- Norman Wildberger lecture 16, History of Mathematics, University of New South Wales. YouTube. 2012 May.
- Pseudospherical surfaces at the virtual math museum.