scholarly journals Principal Foliations of Surfaces near Ellipsoids

10.53733/126 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 52 ◽  
pp. 361-379
Author(s):  
John Guckenheimer

The lines of curvature of a surface embedded in $\R^3$ comprise its principal foliations. Principal foliations of surfaces embedded in $\R^3$ resemble phase portraits of two dimensional vector fields, but there are significant differences in their geometry because principal foliations are not orientable. The Poincar\'e-Bendixson Theorem precludes flows on the two sphere $S^2$ with recurrent trajectories larger than a periodic orbit, but there are convex surfaces whose principal foliations are closely related to non-vanishing vector fields on the torus $T^2$. This paper investigates families of such surfaces that have dense lines of curvature at a Cantor set $C$ of parameters. It introduces discrete one dimensional return maps of a cross-section whose trajectories are the intersections of a line of curvature with the cross-section. The main result proved here is that the return map of a generic surface has \emph{breaks}; i.e., jump discontinuities of its derivative. Khanin and Vul discovered a qualitative difference between one parameter families of smooth diffeomorphisms of the circle and those with breaks: smooth families have positive Lebesgue measure sets of parameters with irrational rotation number and dense trajectories while families of diffeomorphisms with a single break do not. This paper discusses whether Lebesgue almost all parameters yield closed lines of curvature in families of embedded surfaces.


1997 ◽  
Vol 29 (7) ◽  
pp. 783-811 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Cairó ◽  
Jaume Llibre


1985 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin Boyd

AbstractA class of vector fields on the 2-torus, which includes Cherry fields, is studied. Natural paths through this class are defined and it is shown that the parameters for which the vector field is unstable is the closure ofhas irrational rotation number}, where ƒ is a certain map of the circle andRtis rotation throught. This is shown to be a Cantor set of zero Hausdorff dimension. The Cherry fields are shown to form a family of codimension one submanifolds of the set of vector fields. The natural paths are shown to be stable paths.



1999 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 21-33 ◽  
Author(s):  

Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen, first let me thank you for coming to this meeting that has been organized by us in close collaboration with UYDP, OCHA, UNIGEF and IDNOR with generous support from the Canadian, UK, and USA development agencies. It always is a pleasure to recognize our partners.We have with us here today representatives of a large number of agencies, institutions, NGOs, and private individuals. This cross section of interests is a manifestation of a growing and irreversible trend. The important issues of our time cannot be dealt with solely by nations, agencies, or individuals, even the most powerful ones. The phenomenon of globalization no longer is restricted to economic or financial matters: it is now evoking the wide participation of ranges and numbers of actors that would have been unthinkable a few decades ago. In almost all aspects of our work, we are looking to find the partners and interests that can bring value to the management of the issue or the search for solutions, if definitive solutions ever can be found to the really important human challenges.





2006 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. 3401-3410 ◽  
Author(s):  
MONTSERRAT CORBERA ◽  
JAUME LLIBRE

For polynomial vector fields in ℝ3, in general, it is very difficult to detect the existence of an open set of periodic orbits in their phase portraits. Here, we characterize a class of polynomial vector fields of arbitrary even degree having an open set of periodic orbits. The main two tools for proving this result are, first, the existence in the phase portrait of a symmetry with respect to a plane and, second, the existence of two symmetric heteroclinic loops.



Author(s):  
Marta Giaretton ◽  
Dmytro Dizhur ◽  
Francesca Da Porto ◽  
Jason M. Ingham

Almost all unreinforced stone masonry (URSM) buildings in New Zealand were constructed between 1860 and 1910, typically in regions where natural stone was sourced from local quarries, fields and rivers. These buildings form an important part of the country’s architectural heritage, but the performance of URSM buildings during earthquake induced shaking can differ widely due to many aspects related to the constituent construction materials and type of masonry wall cross-section morphology. Consequently, as a step towards gaining greater knowledge of the New Zealand URSM building stock and its features, an exercise was undertaken to identify and document the country-wide URSM building inventory. The compiled building inventory database includes: (i) general building information, such as address, building owner/tenant and building use; (ii) architectural configuration, such as approximate floor area, number of storeys, connection with other buildings, plan and elevation regularity; and (iii) masonry type, such as stone and mortar types, wall texture and wall cross-section morphology. From this exercise it is estimated that there is in excess of 668 URSM buildings currently in existence throughout New Zealand. A large number of these vintage URSM buildings require detailed seismic assessment and the implementation of seismic strengthening interventions in order to conserve and enhance this component of New Zealand’s cultural and national identity. The entire stock of identified buildings is reported in the appended annex (688 total), including 20 URSM buildings that were demolished following the Canterbury earthquake sequence.



2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (11) ◽  
pp. 1250273 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. CAUBERGH ◽  
J. LLIBRE ◽  
J. TORREGROSA

We study the reversible cubic vector fields of the form ẋ = -y + ax2+ bxy + cy2- y(x2+ y2), ẏ = x + dx2+ exy + fy2+ x(x2+ y2), having simultaneously a center at infinity and at the origin. In this paper, the subclass of these reversible systems having collinear or infinitely many singularities are classified with respect to topological equivalence.



Author(s):  
Christopher D. Bertram ◽  
Nicholas K. Truong ◽  
Stephen D. Hall

Almost all vascular conduits in the human body, being flexible, collapse elastically to a non-circular cross-section when the external pressure sufficiently exceeds the internal. Examples include the brachial artery (sphygmomanometry), veins (everyday manoeuvres), pulmonary airways (forced expiration), pulmonary capillaries (zones 1 and 2), and the urethra (micturition). Venous collapse is involved in regulation of venous return, which in turn regulates cardiac output.



Author(s):  
J. Zou ◽  
D.J.H. Cockayne ◽  
A. Sikorski ◽  
B.F. Usher

A series of plan-view and cross-section samples of multi-quantum wells (MQWs) consisting of 32nm GaAs and 10.5nm In0.15Ga0.85As grown by molecular beam epitaxy on GaAs substrates were examined by TEM. Tne number of periods (n) of the MQWs were 3, 6, 12, 24, and 48. The results showed that for n smaller than or equal to 12 periods, almost all misfit dislocations (MDs) were found near the epitaxial surface (see figure 1) which is far away from the interface between the MQWs and the substrate; but for n equal to or larger than 24 periods, most MDs were observed at the bottom interface between the MQWs and the substrate (shown in figure 2).To explain these observations, a new nucleation mechanism for the MDs has been derived from energy considerations, based on the theory of the critical thickness of the half circular dislocation loop (HCDL) in a single epitaxial layer and the strain contribution in the MQWs.



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