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Pseudosphere

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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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Tractroid

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 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 R2 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 pseudosphere and its relation to three other models of hyperbolic geometry

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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Deforming the pseudosphere to a portion of Dini's surface. In differential geometry, this is a Lie transformation. In the corresponding solutions to the sine-Gordon equation, this deformation corresponds to a Lorentz Boost of the static 1-soliton solution.

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

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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

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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

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References

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  1. ^ 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.)

  2. ^ 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
  3. ^ 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
  4. ^ 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
  5. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Pseudosphere". MathWorld.
  6. ^ Roberts, Siobhan (15 January 2024). "The Crochet Coral Reef Keeps Spawning, Hyperbolically". The New York Times.
  7. ^ Thurston, William, Three-dimensional geometry and topology, vol. 1, Princeton University Press, p. 62.
  8. ^ 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
  9. ^ Wheeler, Nicholas. "From Pseudosphere to sine-Gordon equation" (PDF). Retrieved 24 November 2022.
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