E. Bombieri ( E d.)
Geometric Measure Theory and Minimal Surfaces Lectures given at a Summer School of the Centro Internazionale Matematico Estivo (C.I.M.E.), held in Varenna (Como), Italy, August 24 - September 2, 1972
C.I.M.E. Foundation c/o Dipartimento di Matematica “U. Dini” Viale Morgagni n. 67/a 50134 Firenze Italy
[email protected]
ISBN 978-3-642-10969-0 e-ISBN: 978-3-642-10970-6 DOI:10.1007/978-3-642-10970-6 Springer Heidelberg Dordrecht London New York
©Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2010 Reprint of the 1st ed. C.I.M.E., Ed. Cremonese, Roma 1973 With kind permission of C.I.M.E.
Printed on acid-free paper
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CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE MA TEMATICO ESTIVO (C.I.M.E.) 3 0 CicIo - Varenna :- dal 24 agosto al 2. settembre
1972
GEOMETRIC MEASURE THEORY AND MINIMAL SURFACES Coordinatore : Prof. E. BOMBIERI
W. K. ALLARD: F . J . ALMGREN JR . : E
GIUSTI:
J . GU CKENHEIMER: D . KI!'{DERLEHRER :
M.
MIRANDA:
L . C. PICCININI :
On the first variation of area and generalize<;l mean curvature. Geometric measure theory and ellipt ic variational problems .
Pag.
1
" "
119
"
155
The analyticity of the coincidence set in variational inequalities .
"
173
Boundaries of Caccioppoli sets in the calculus of variations.
"
189
"
221
Minimal surfaces with obstacles . Singularities in soap-bubble -like and soap-film-like surfaces.
De Giorgi's measure and thin obstacles.
31
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE MATE MATICO ESTIVO
(c.r. M.E.)
W . K. ALLARD
ON THE FIRST VARI:ATION OF AREA AND GENERALIZED MEAN CURVATURE
Carso t e n u t o a
Varenna dal 24
agosto al 2 settembre
1972
- 3 -
w.
K. Allard
Lecture One
to describe the work of
Our object in these lectures is
A1lIIgren and the author on the first variation of the k
En.
We will work with a very generaJ. defini-
tion of k
En
and will impose conditions
on the first variations of the areas of these surfaces which will imp~
their rectifiabillty and differentiability. We begin by giving a simple and very generaJ. definition of
surface.
LetG{n,k)
linear subspaces of
be the GrasSmaml manifold of k
Let
~ (E n)
~n x G{n,k).
space of Radon measures on
are called k
be the we~ topologized
JR.n
The elements of Vk(E
JR n.
n)
As we shall 'Bee, azry
in the classicaJ. sense; with or with-
out si.ngula.rities, oriented or not, mq be thought of as a k
= V(A on
X C(n,k»
Given V
JR.n.
E
Vk(JR
n)
for A C JR.n ; evident~, IIvlI
,we let
IIvll(A)
=
is a Radon measure
En. Let
En.
Hom( JR n,nP)
be the algebra of linear endanorphisms of
We may identif'y G(n,k)
subvariety of Hom(m n ,En) linear subspace of endanorphism of subspace.
with a compact nonsingular algebraic
by associating to azry k
En, that is to any member of
JR. n which orthogon~ proj ects
Thus, given
linear subspace of
JR.n
S
E
G{n,k) , the En
onto this
G(n,k) ,we will consider S
or a .linear endanorphism of
ever is convenient at the time.
En, which-
The space Hcm(JR. n ,JR. n)
naturaJ. inner product given by the formula
as a
has a
- 4 -
W. K." -Allard A·B = trace A* °B here A*
ported
is the adjoint of A.
Let
n) X(JR
En
vaJ.ued tunetions on
g e X(JRn)
be the vector space of smooth compactly supEn.
In particuJ.ar, if
and x e JRn the total differential Dg(x)
is a mem-
ber of Han(JRn,E n) • Let
V e Tk(JR
n).
We define the first variation distr!-
by the f'ormula
= J Dg(x)·SdV(x,S)
5V(g)
,
In the te:nnino1.ogy of' Laurent Schwartz,
JRn of' type variation" •
En .
5V is a distribution on
We now exp1.ain why we use the tenn "firs t
To CD this we need to introduce the notions of' Jaco-
bian and def'onnation. Suppose F : JRn -.... JRn sional Jacobian of'
is smooth.
We define the k dimen-
F
by the f'ormula JkF(x,S) = k area of' DF(x)[S n (x: Ixl <1.)], (x,S) e JRn k area of' S n (x: Ixl < 1.} If' one chooses an orthononnal basis
of'
S
X
4i(n,k) •
f'or which
- 5 -
W. K. Allard
one sees easily that (1.)
JkF(x,S) =
k
n
i=1.
l~i;DF(x»1 •
Moreover, it is not hard to define a hanogeneous polynanial f'unction P k
01; degree
2k on Hom(En,]Rn)
such that
(x,S) E lRn X G(n,k)
FHV(A) =
J
(x,S): (F(x),DF(x)(S»
E
JkF(x,S)dV(X,S) , A} A C ]Rn
Then FHV is a Borel. regu1.ar measure on ]Rn tionaJ..1y, on
]Rn
X
F is proper, it is c1.ear that FHV G(n,k) ; that is,
A trip1.e
(I::,h,K)
if I:: >-0, h : (-1::,1::) subset of
X
X
FHV
E
G(n,k).
G(n,k) • If', addi-
is a Radon measure
'¥k(]Rn) •
is called a l.ocal deformation of En
]Rn ~]Rn is smooth,
K is a canpact
]Rn and h(t,x) = x
if
t = 0
or
~u
x _ K•
We set ht(X) .. h(t,x}
and ht(x} ..
(t,x)
Evidently, he E X(]Rn}
c;
X
(-I::,I::) X En.
feomorph:l.am of
:m n
for lJlD&11. t .
ht+u(X} lu .. 0 for
and h t is a difMoreover, we have that
lnaeed, (3) follows f'l'CIIll (2) and (4) is verified by choosiJlg an
- 6 -
W. K. Allard
orthonormal basis
v •• ' ,v 1' k
of S
such that l=5 i<j=5 k ,
= 0 ,
•
and then using (1) to calculate d
k
i~l
dt
IVi .+ t
k 1:
i=l
=
>1 It =0
.. vi
0
nho(X)'
s .
Using (3) and (4) we establish the following formula for V • V ( E n) k
and s:ny locaJ. deformation
for this reason
5V
(e ,h ,K)
of
En:
is called the first variation distribution
of V. We will now show how to associate a var1fo1d, in
:m n of
wl!I(f, to s:ny snbman1fold of
loc~ finite area.
is a k dimens!onaJ. submanifo1d of class i f MC
:m n and for
cp: :m k ~ En W of
a
a
every
€
p-
(1 =5 P=5 -)
d.
natural
We SB;y- M in
iR n
M there are class p f'Uncti0D8
and t: En ~ E k , and an open ne:lghborhood
such that tOq>(Y) = y,
Whenever A
y
E
€
C:mn and a
closed cone with vertex
€
0
k
k "Dd W n M = W n q>(E ) •
C1;;sur~ A , we let in
En
Tan(A,a)
be the
consisting of those vectors v
- 7 -
W. K,. Allard
in
JR n
such that
~,x2' ••• e A - (a)
lvi-Iv.
/xi-al-l{xi-a)
lim
v=0
such that either
or
F 0 and, there x. = a and
v
lim
i-+oo
We let
J.
are points
Nor{A,a) = (w: v·w < 0
i-+oo
for all
v e Tan{A,a») •
Evident~,
Tan(M,a) e G{n,k) for each ure on IMI (A)
a eM.
Let
and
14k
if M is as above,
Nor(M,a) e G{n,n-k)
be the k dimensional Hausdorff meas-
JR n ; we set
= H k(x:
and observe that Clear~,
(x,Tan{M,x» IMI
A C JRn x G{n,k) ,
e A) ,
is a Bo:l"el regular measure on
IMI e Y (JRn) k
bounded open subset of
i f and o~ if
JR n
]R
n x G(n,k).
M intersects l/EVery
in a set of finite k dimensional area.
Fran the change of variables formula of advanced calculus we have that (6)
F#IMI
= IF(M) I
for arry diffeomorphism F
This motivates the definition of F#. sional submanifold of class 1 in (€,h,K)
En,
is a local defonnation of
Suppose
of
JRn.
M is a k dimen-
IMI e Yk(E
n)
and
JRn; using (5) and (6) we see
that
(1)
8I M/(ho )
=
~t#k[ht{M n
K)]lt=o.
We now suppose that (8)
M is a smooth k dimensional submanifold of
En With
boundary B. By this we mean that M is
~
k dimensional submanifold of class
00
- 8 -
W_ K. Allard
in
E
n
B = (Closure M) - M , and that for each b E B
,that
there are smooth f'unctions
k
and an open neighborhood W of b ,o
ClearJy
and
~
lR
n and ,: JR n
~
k
lR ,
such that
W n M = W n
k
n (y : Yk < 0)
n IMI E Wk(JR ) _ We will now calculate
81MI
in terms of
the mean curvature vector of M and the exterior normal to M along B , which we now define_ Given
a EM, we define the bilinear f'unction
B(a): Tan(M,a) X Tan(M,a) ~ Nor(M,a) , called the second f'undamental form of M at
a, by the requirement that
B(a) (v,w)-u = -v • ~,<w,'I'»
, u E Nor(M,a) ,
n here '1': Tan(M,a) ~ Han(JR n ,JR ) Nor(M, - )
at
a, when Nor (M,- )
with values in
(9)
G(n,k)
v- <w,Dg(a» whenever
C
is the differential of
is considered as a f'unction on M
Hom(JR n ,lR n) _ We have that
= -B(a) (v,w) - g(a)
g E X(JRn )
and
,
EM, in the direction w at
v - <w,Dg(a»
a
= v - <<w,Dg(a»,Nor(M,a»
<<w,Dg(a», Nor(M,a»
!'or
x EM
g(x) =
to obtain
= -B(a) (v,w) -g(a) because
v, w E Tan(M,a) ,
g(x) E Nor(M,x)
in fact, we m8¥ differentiate the equation X
v, w E Tan(M,a)
E Nor(M,a)
+ v -
,
- 9 -
W. K.
We define the me!lll curvature vector H(a)
~ll<J.);"d
of M at
a- by
setting H(a) = trac~ B(a)
€
Nor(M,a)
from (9) we have immediate~ that
(10)
Dg(a)'T!Ill(M,a)
= -kg(a)'H(a)
!Illd g(x)
Fin~, given b
€
whenever
Nor(M,x) V(b)
for
x
fil-l
= En
€
B ,we define
€
fil-l n T!Ill(M,b) n Nor(B,b)
€
g
€
X(JR
n)
M
€
n (x:
[x] =l)
by the requirement - V(b) We call
V(b)
the exterior normal to M at
• b
We have the following basic formula for (11)
81MI (g)
=
-k
81MI
=
J g(x).H(x)dHkx +J g(b)'V(b)d#k-~,
M
g
B
We complete this lecture with the proof of this formula.
X(JR n).
€
In view
of the existence of partitions of unity, it will suffice to verif'y that (a)
81MI (g) = -k
J g(x) 'H(x)d1:'t'kx
whenever
g
€
X(E
n)
M
and
g(x)
€
Nor(M,x)
for
x
€
M
and that (b)
8IMI(g) =
J g(b)'V(b)dNk-~
whenever
B
g(x)
€
T!Ill(M,x)
for
x
€
M,
g
€
X(E
n)
,
- 10 -
w. and for some
and
1jr: :m
n
cp: :m k ~
a eMU B there are smooth f'unctions
--"T
. ~ :R
k
K. Allard
,and an open neighbor.hood W of
a
in
:m
lIf n
such that spt g C W ,
1jr°CP{y)
=y
for
k
y e JR
a e M
. if if
aeB.
Formula (a) follows immediately from (10). ~t(Y) =
ht(Y)
y+ t
,
= x+cpo~t01jr(x)
To prove (b), we let
(t ,y)
cpo~t
x
E
Ek ;
k
y e :m
a(y) = JkCP{y,m ) , h ocp = t
e
(t,x) e :m x :mn ;
- cpo1jr{x) ,
k
Because
,
' the naturality of the Jacobian implies that
with the help of (4) we compute ye E
k
Using (6) and (7) we see that
I
:mk
. k D(a~ )(y)O:lR d 0
aeM,
in this case.
Y e:m
k
with
k
y ,
D(ae )(y)·mkd -H ky ,
I
(y: Yk < oj If
#
a eM;
if
a e B •
0
•
k
Suppose now a e B.
For any
o/MI(g) = 0
Yk = 0
if'
since a~o e x(m ) , so (b) is verified
we have that
v e :m k
and any
,
- 11 -
W
here
K . Allard
~ is the k'th standard basis vector in :IRk, and one
verif'ies the equation easily by taking and then orthogonal to
J
(y: Yk
< o)
D(ato)(y)·:IR
J
~.
k
d
(y: Yk =o)
to be a multiple of'
Theref'ore,
f:/- ky = • #k 1 a(y)so(Y)·~ d - Y
J g(b) ·V(b) B
v
d #.}-~
~
- 12 -
W. K. Allard
Lecture Two
V e V (:R n) k
Suppose
[ev]
on
JRn
We define a Borel regular measure
as follows :
ltd
[ev] (u) = sup (BV(g): g e X(E n), if
IIBvlI(A)
JRn
U is an open subset of
if
A is any subset of
= inf
JRn
( IIBvll (U): A C U and
In other words,
IIBvl1
Let us suppose that
,
<1
and
spt g C U}
,
U is open).
is the totaJ. variation of the operator II BVII
is a Radon measure on
that for every bounded open subset
U of
JR n
BV.
JR n ; this means there is a constant
C such that
for every
g e X(JR
It is then elementary that
BV
BV , to the vector space of on
n)
with
spt g C U
has a unique extension, aJ.so denoted
JR n
vaJ.ued bounded Baire functions
JRn with compact support, which satisfies the requirement that BV(g)
whenever
=
lim BV(gi) i-t oo
are a: unifo~ bounded sequence of
valued Baire functions on
JRn
supported in some fixed compact set
for which lim i~oo
gi (x) = g (x)
for aJ.l
x
€
JR n •
- 13 -
W. K. Allard
As an example, if
are as in (11) of Lecture One
M,B,H,v
we have that
J
\IoIMI II(K)
KnM
\H(x)\d-#kx + -j4.k-l(K n B)
for a:rry compact subset
The condition that
IIoVII
K of
]Rn •
is a Radon measure, together
with a certain "dimension axiom", implies that
V is rectifiable;
we sFJ¥ that a varifold V i s rectifiable if there are continously differentiable k dimensional submanifolds
~ ,M • • 2,.
of
En
such
that 00
(Note that we allow repetitions in the list
the
In order to formulate
Let a(k) =
make a def'inition. V e Yk(]Rn)
and
-# k[]Rk n
= lim r~O
!l (a,r)
Given
IIvlI:rn (a.r) a(k)rk a
of radius
r .
are as in (8) of Lecture One,
rf-(IIIMIU;a)
= {
V e ~ (]Rn)
(x: Ixl < l}).
is the closed ba.l1 centered at
For example, i f M,B
If'
"dimension axiom", we need to
a e mn , let rf-( IIvll ,a)
where
~,M2' .••. )
0
if
a~MUB
1/2
if if
a e B a e M
1
is rectifiable,
measurable function and
rf-( IIvll,· )
is a real valued
11 k
- 14 -
Vi.
= 1>1 kU:f( IIvll,·)
IIvll
;
c1ear~, ~(IIVII ,x) > 0 for IIvll almost basic fact in geometric messure theory. We now state
precise~
Rectifiability Theorem. Radon measure,
all . x
10
]Rn ; this is a
See [FE 2.10.19].
t he
Suppose V
Y (]Rn) k
10
and
115Vll
is a
Then
(a)
~(IIVIl,x) 1O]R for
(b)
if
then
K. Allard
IIvll
~(lIvll ,x) > 0 for
almost all x IIvll
10
almost all x
]Rn ; 10 :R n
,
V is rectifiable. Our "dimension axiom" is that the density
essent i~
positive; it sa;ys,
ro~,
~(IIVII,.) be
that the dimension of the
[v] is at. roost k . We illustrate this condition by the
measure following Example. Let
V=
fiable .
Take
k
fin x I.l
10
and choose a Radon measure
Yk(]Rn).
However, for any g 5V(g) =
f
It is clear that 10
I.l
on
G(n,k) .
V is not recti-
X(]Rn) , we have
Dg(x)·S dV(x,S)
=
If
=
f {f
Dg(x) ·S d
Hnx dI.lS
Dg(x)d f:{.nx)·S dI.lS
= 0
because I.l(G(n,k»
f
Dg(x)d 1-1 nx
=1
=0
,g having compact support .
= #- n
, we see that
IIvll
ef( IIvll ,x)
for every
= 0
so that x
10
]Rn .
Assuming
- 15 -
w.
K. Alla r d
'('he positivity of t h e density is preserved by weak convergen ce in t h e sense of the following Closure Theorem.
Suppose
Vl'V2' .•• ,V
tive continuous function on
€
e
Vk (:JR n )
i s a po si-
IRP n
lim V. = V in 1':k(:JR ) . J. J.-+OO
l~ sup (IiVili + lIovill)(K) < J. -+ 00
00
for every compact subset
ek ( lI v J.. lI , x ) ->
e(x )
for
IIv J. .1I almost; all
x
€
n
K of
:JR
,
JR n,
i = 1,2 , .••.
Then
Eh IIv lI ,x)
~ e(x)
for
IIvlI
aJlnos t all
x
€
JR n .
I t i s b eyond "(;u,=, s cop e of thes e l e ctures t o gi ve a complet e proof of t he s e theorems .
In the next lecture, howev er , we wi ll
deri ve all the ge omet r i c i ngredient s of their pr oof s .
- 16 -
w.
K. Allard
Lecture Three Suppose For each
V
a € :ffi n
~a.t(X) a
a,
v(t)
€
\OR n)
and
and each
=
= IIvllex:
i
x:a
115vII
is!j. Radon measure on
t €:ffi
we set
if
Ix-al ~ t ,
if
t
Ix-al ~ t}
:R n •
< Ix-al ~ a, V(t)
= 5V(Sa. t)
We have the basic relation about Change of mass in concentric bails:
(1)
s-ltx
. (s) a,V
r-I£
a, v(r)
exp
s
d7 a,V(t)
r
tna,v(t)
s
13 a,V(t) dt tn a, V(t)
J
expJ
r
whenever distance (a,sptllvll) < r < s < In proving (1) we suppose
a = 0
and write a,~ ,7
a ·V' t3 n' 7 V' respective~. For each e: > 0 0, a.,v 0, fUnction f e:: :ffi n ~:ffi in such a way that fe:(x)
~
Ix]
Ixl grad fe:(x) ~ x Let
", e
C ~(:ffi)
and let
unifo~
q>(t ) =
as
00
for
we choose a smooth
e: ~ 0 •
t.; ",( T)dT,
t € :ffi •
For each
- 17 -
W. K. Allard
e > 0 ,let
ge(x) = cp(±:e(X))X'
x
JR
€
n
" Note that
ge
€
X"(R
and that
so that Dge(x)"S = cp'(f'e(X)) grad f'e(x)"X 1
- cp'(f'e(x)) grad f'e(X)"S (x) + kcp(f'e(x)) " Integrating with respect to V and letting
J cp(t)~(t)
=
J ~'(t)t
e ~ 0 , we have that
dl(t) -
- J cp'(t)dr(t)
+k
J cp(t)da(t)
Integrating by parts in this last expression, we see that
1 *(t)~(t)dt =-1 +
¥(t)t dl(t) +
1 *(t)dr(t)
+k
1 ¥(t)a(t)dt
so that, in the sense of' distribution theory, ~(t)dt = -
tdl(t) + dr(t) + ~(t)dt
tdl(t) - ~(t)dt
daft~ _ ~ dt a t t
We integrate:f'rom r
to
=-
~(t)dt +
= _ ~(t~d) it:X t
s
dy(t)
+ dr(t) "
1iiTtT'
to obtain (1)"
n)
- 1[; -
w.
K. Al.rar-d
From (1) we draw two basic corollaries: () .k () r -k l): a, V r ::: s l): a, V s exp
(2)
E a tt Jrs ~V V.", a, oW
dt
whenever distance (a,sptIlVID < r < s < (3)
if r
C
€
Vk(JR
n),
varies, then
8C = 0 x
€
S
and for
00
r-1txo,C(r) is constant as
C almost all
(x,S)
Both these statements follow almost immediately from (1). draw some consequences of (2).
(4)
~(lIvll ,a)
€
JR
whenever
We first
The firs+. is that lim sup 118VIIJB ta,r)
r+o~
This is an immediate consequence of (2).
<
00
Note t h at , as a conse-
quence of the Besicovitch theory of symmetrical derivation ([FE 2.8, 2.9]) , we have that lim 118v IIE (a,r) €:ffi
for
r+o~
IIvll
almost all
a € JRn
t his is (a) of the Rectifiability Theorem of Lecture Two. We have the follc:,.i.ng upperse.micontinuity property of the density:
If in ~(JRn),
lim Vi=V
lim
i~oo
i~oo
and for some
then
i
=a
in
e > 0
eIl8v. II E ( a . , r ) < IIV.IIE(a.,r) , ~
a
~
-
~
~
0 <
r
< e
:ffi n ,
- 19 -
W . K. Allard
In fact, whenever
0
E ,
~
and
~ (r-Ia-ail)-kaa.v. (r-Ia-ail) (l-Iai-al/r)k ~
-> a(k)ak(IIV.II,a.) ~
we let
i ~ A
00
~
exp(-r/E) (1-1 a._al/r)k ~
and then let
to obtain (5).
r ~ 0
very important consequence of (5) is the
Isoperimetric Inequality.
r}-( IIvll,x) >
Here
~
1
C is a
for
[v]
con~ tant
Suppose almos t all
€
'¥k(JRn) ,
x e JRn.
depending only on
The proof is as follows. s =
V
IT
a
Suppose €
IIvll(E n) <
00
and
Then
n. 1
< A. <
00
JRn is such that
and
r}-( Ilvll ,a) Z 1
we have from (2) that e
xp
JS
lIoVIlJB (a,t) dt > o~ -
s o that for some t(a)
with
r}-(lIvlI,a~
a(k)sk
a a, vs)
0 < t(a) < s
lIovllJB fa,tfaB > log A. • MJB a , t a s The inequality (6) now follows from the covering lemma of Besicovitch in the form given by [FE 2 .8.14].
- 20 -
W. K. Allard
An immediate corollary of (6) is that
-H k(M) (k-1)/k ~ c[J
(7)
IH(x) IdHkx +
M
wheID"er M,B,H
H k-1(B)]
are as in (8) of Lecture One
and ftk(M) <
cc
Using the inequality (6), one can prove a Bob o.Iov type inequality for varifo1ds, and consequently for manifolds; we ami t the details. Let us now consider the assertion (3). C
Ilcli
is as in (3), the measure
We assert that if
is homogeneous of degree k, that
is (8) whenever
0 < r < cc
and hanogeneous of degree 0
Let
V f
Vf(A) =
€
Tk(m
fA
n)
cp
€
C. <Xl(]Rn) o
f: ]Rn - {a} ~ {t: 0 ~ t < <Xl}
To verify this, suppose
grad f( x)·S(x)
and
=0
is smooth
so that for
C almost all
(x,S).
be characterized by the condition that
f(x)dV(x,S)
for every Borel subset
A of
]Rn x G(n,k).
One readily verifies that
5C e) = 0 for ge as in the proof of f(g (1) and argues as in the pl'OOf of (1) that t -Itx C (t) is constant 0,
as a :f'unction of
t
since (3
c .(t )
0, f
= r
c
0, f
f
(t) = 0,
0 < t < <Xl •
The relation (8) is now a technical consequence of these observationa.
- 21 -
w.
Suppose we impose on
e
K . Allard
the additional requirement that
It follows that (10)
e = Ehllell,o)lsol In fact, for
lIeli
for some So
a.1lnost all
and (8) that, whenever 0 <
r..(! al
a
€
a;(n,k) •
€
lR
n
we have from (2)
+r) < r
ek ( lI e ll,o ) < ef(lIell,a)
:s
(O:(k)rk)-~a ,e(r)
= (0: (k)(r..r)k) -1 0:,
,
~a,
e (r..r)
s (0: (k)(r-r..! al)k)-l O:r..a,e(r-Ir..1a) $ . (0: (k)(r-r.. Ial)k) -1 0: ,e(r) 0
= ef(lIell,o)(l-r..lal/ to)-k
letting r.. t 0 we see that
O
(ll) Using (3) again, we have fran (n) that lieII
for x-a e S for by
e
a.1most all a
a.1most all
JRn ,
€
(x,S)
:m n X G(n,k)
€
Tonelli's Theorem, for
(1'2)
x-a € 'S
e
a.1lnost all lieII
for
(x,8)
a.1lnost all
so that for some (x ,S ) €lR n X G(n,k) o
0
€
En
X
G(n ,k) ,
a € JRn
- 22 -
w.
since
n
x - a ES o 0
for
llell
alJnost all
a E lR
a E x +S o 0
for
lIell
alJnost all
a E JRn
0 E sptllell
if
e
F0
sptllell From (11) we see tbat
K . Allard
, we see tbat
c So •
[c] = ef(lIell,o) #\So
and tben from (12)
we deduce (10). We now describe a situation in which occur naturaJ.1y varifolds
as in (3).
e
For each
VEYk(JR
~
(x) = r(x-a).
x E JR n ,let
a,r
pactness of measures one deduces sequence
r
l,r 2
e E VktE n) lim
i ~oo
,...
n),
Suppose
re~
aEJR Ii
Using tbe weak com-
tbe existence of a
of positive real numbers and a varifold
such tbat r.
~
=
00
and
e
=
lim i ~oo
~
a,ri
HV
in
Vk(JR
n)
,
and computes easily tbat k lIellJB (c.e) = Ef(lIvlI,a) a(k)t ,
Be(g)
=0
,
a
i s a point of
Ilvll
n
g E X(lR ) •
Thus (3) and, consequently, (8) bold. that
o
Ii' we assume, additionaJ.1y,
uppersemicontinuity of
a , which by definition means that for every
lim r~ 0
Ef( IIvll,· )
e >0
k .:.!-lIv,-" n ...>..{=x::........;:;..ef...>..(,,-,lIv..... 1I =,x:L..)_<;....:8:......u ( lIL.:. vu.. z1l,=a)c.....-......:c:.t.} . II=JB.. >. (.;;,;.,a,=r<-.).;...:. = 0 , IIvIIJB (a,r)
at
- 23 -
W . K. Allard
one ma;y prove that (9) holds; the proof is a tricky application of
(5) and the Besicovitch covering lemma.
It is well known that a
measurable function is approx:iJnately continuous almost everywhere; thus (13) holds for
IIvll
In other words, for
IIvll
which arise are as in (10). on the sequence ever, that at
r IIvll
(14)
l,r2
V~
Conceivably such a
almost all points
One proceeds as follows.
a e JR n
almost all
the only
C' s
C ma;y be dependent
fran which it came; one can show, how-
,. ..
for same
G(n,k) ,let
a e JRn •
almost all
S
a
a e JR n ,
e G(n,k) ,
For each continuous function
be the Radon measure on
V~(A) = fA ~(S)dV(x,S)
JRn
~
on
such that
for. each Borel subset
B of
En
By the Besicovitch theory of symmetrical de rivation, lim V§JB (a,r) r~o IIVIlJB (a,r)
e JR
for
Ilvll
almost all
a e JRn
one then sees rather easily that for lim r~o
Ilvll
almost all
V~JB (a,r) €
IIvlllB (a,r)
lR
a
€
for all
JRn , ~
as above.
We have given an almost complete proof that a point
b. €
lR n
for which (4) of Lecture Two holds , and for which (13) and (15) hold,
- 24 -
W. K . Allard
enjoys (14).
Of' course
IIvII
almost all points are like this.
The Rectif'iability Theorem. now f'ollows :fran the basic properties of' Hausdorff' measure and Lipschitz functions . f'ollows :from an argument based on \ (5).
The Closure Theorem.
- 25 -
W . K. . Allard
Lecture Four The most ilIlportant theorem in this field is the Regularity Theorem.
Whenever
0
< e: < 1 and
k
< P < co there is
TJ
>
0
with the following property: If
(1)
V e vk(m
ef( IIvll ,x)
n),
0 e sptllVIl
~ 1 for [v] almost
I\VII (x: Ixl < 1}
(2)
g e x(m
n)
all
x e mn
~ (l+1J)a(k) ;
5V(g) < TJ
and
(q
=pj (p-L)
spt g C (x: Ixl < 1}
and
t :aen
e
there are a linear isanetry entiable f'unctions
of
mn
f.: m k ---;. m,
j = 1, ••. ,n-k , such that
J
f . (0) J
= 0,
D.f (0) ~
j
and continuously differ-
=0
,
ID.f.(y) - D.f.(z)! < e:ly_z!l-kjp , ~J
~J
-
,
i=l, ... ,k,
y,z e m k ,
j = 1, ••• ,n-k ,
and such that (x: Ixl
< 1-e:} n e(sptllvll) = = (x:lxl < 1-e:} n (x: ~+~
=fj
(JS.';" ,~), j
= 1, .•• ,n-k}
We begin our discussion of this theorem by applying it to smooth submanif'old.& of
mn
•
•
- 26 -
W . K. Allard
Corollary.
Let
p, TJ
E,
and
C be as in the Regularity Theorem.
If' (I)
M is a smooth submanifold of
o
€
B
k(
with boundary
B
and
M ;
(2) flk(M (3)
JRn
:s (l+r])ci(k)
n (x:lxl < In
n (x: Ix] < I) = ¢ and
J
IH(x)IP d ffkx)l/P:s TJ
< I)
M n (x:lxl
then t he conclusions of the Regularity Theorem hold wi th by
spt~VII
replaced
M. Roughly speaking, t he corollary says t hi s :
If the area
an d t he mean curvature are sufficiently disc-like, then so is t h e s ubmani f ol d in the
G i-kip
topology;
To begin our discussion of the Regularity Theorem as it applies to general varifolds, we need the following Lemma. of
Suppose
n, JR
V
Vk(m
€
k
n),
0 < d < co, U
q=p/(p-l).
5V(g) whenever
is an open subset
O
:s CUlglq dllvll)l/q, g
€
n) X(JR
and
spt g C U
9.l1d
E h IIvll , x) 2: Then
ff(IIvll ,.) . is
d
for
IIvll
almost all
x
€
U •
a real vatued uppersemicontinuous function on U.
- 27 -
W. K . Alla r d
We have proved this theorem already ( s ee (5) of Lecture p = "",
Two) in case
p <
In case
q = 1
t he argument ne eds
co
to be mor e delicate and uses t h e Isoperimetric Inequality ; we omit it. Suppose now V satisfies the hypotheses of the Lemma. Let
D be the set of points
ek ( Ilvll ,.)
oscillation of dTJ.
a
in
U
n s pt llVIl
, restricted to
sptllVIl , do es not exceed
ek ( Ilv ll> ,.)
Owing to the uppersemicontinuity of
elementary that
D is dense in
U
, it i s
n sptllvll. Also, if a e D it
is e asy t o see that for some sufficiently small
s a ~~sfies
for Which the
r
t h e hypotheses of the Regularity Theorem.
n sptllVIl
t he var i f old
We con clude
that an open dense subset of
U
entiable subman i f ol d of
whose t ang ent map satisf ies a HBlde r
lRn
condition (locally) with exponent
i s a continuously differ-
1- kip .
How b ig can t h e exceptional set, that i s the set of points where
s ptllVIl
is nondifferentiable, be ?
It can b e arb itrarily
large as we see from the following Example.
Suppose
= lR 2
n (x: x 2
~
and M 2
= oj ,
~
M 2
lR
= lR 2
is smooth.
n (x :. x 2
Let
= f( x l )}
are smooth 1 dimensional submanifolds of
boundary.
and let
f: JR
Let
N
lR 2
n (a: a
2
= f(a
l)
r ·O}.
Cl early ,
; not e that JR2
~
wi th empty
- 28 -
w.
0
=
Ef(lIvll,a)
r
As is well known, we
-N J.(N) > O.
closed, we see that
a Ii sptllVIl ,
if
J. i f a e (sptllvll) - N , 2
nected with
if
aeN.
m~
take
Because
Obvious:Iy,
spt IIvll
N
to be tota.l1y discon-
N is tota.l1y disconnected and
N is precise:Iy the set of points where the
Ef(lIvll,.) , restricted to
density
K. Allard
sptllVIl , is discontinuous.
does not have the structure of a manifoJ.d near
the points of N. One wou1.d J.1Jte to be abJ.e to put conditions on insure the reguJ.arity almost everywhere of -V. be a difficu1.t probJ.em.
We have the following
Open Question.
V e T
:m n
,
0
<
d
< 00
BV(g) = 0
Suppose
k
e JR
n
BV that
This appears to
U is an open subset of
,
,
whenever
g e X(JR n )
and
spt g C U
and
~(lIvll ,a) 2: d for IIvll almost Let that
all
E
R = sptllvll () (a: sptllvllis smooth near IIvll(u",R)
e U • a
J.
Is it true
= 01
Of course, it is not true that
U'" R
= ~.
For example,
a;rry sum of the varifoJ.ds corresponding to a finite collection of k dimensionaJ. affine subspacee of
in the Open Question.
:m n
will satisfy the conditions
- 29 -
W. K. Allard We now make some remarks regarding the proof of the Regularity Theorem.
It is proved by constructing nonparametric approx-
imations to the surface under consideration, which approximations are close to the original surface in terms of certain geometrically defined quantities which measure the deviation of the surface from being disk-like.
One calculates the Laplacian of these nonpara-
metric approximations and uses well known a priori estimates for th~
Laplacian to obtain geometric information about the approxi-
mations and therefore about the original surfaces.
This is pos-
sible because taking the Laplacian of these approximations amounts to calculating the first variation of area with respect to certain deformations of the original surface, modulo an error which is small relative to the aforementioned geometric quantities. We conclude with another corollary to the Regularity Theorem. There is a positive number
Theorem.
1)
with the followiag property:
Suppose M is a smooth closed k-l dimensional subman d f'o.ld of
-n-l whose mean curvature vector is alw/Ws normal t o
-n-l Ji
Ji
''1hose area does not exceed
(l+rj)lsa(k) ; then Me S
and
for some
S e G(n,k) •
This assertion. is proved by applyiDg the Regularity Theorem to the cone C = (tx: 0 < t < 1 No"te that
and
11. k(C) ~ (l+rj)a(k)and that
x e M)
s!c] = 0
sufficiently small, Closure C is differentiable at
thus if
o.
1)
is
- 30 -
W. K . .Allard
REFERENCE3
L,
Allard, W. K., On the first variation of a
varifo~d,
Ann. of
Math., Vol. 95, Ma;v ~972, pp. 4~7-491. 2.
Almgren, F. J., Jr., The theory of
varifo~ds,
Mimeographed
nct; es, Princeton, 1965.
3.
Federer, H., Geometric Measure Theory, Die Grundlehren der math. Wissenshaften, Band
1969.
~53,
Springer-Verlag, New York,
CENTRO I NT ERNA Z IO NALE MA T E MATICO ESTI VO (C . I. M .E . )
F . J. AL MG REN Jr .
GEOMETRIC MEASU R E THEORY A ND ELLIPTI C VAR IA T IO NAL P RO B L E MS
Corsd
t enuto
a
Var enn a
dal
24
a go s t o
al
2
settembre
1 972
GEOMETRIC MEASURE THEORY AND ELLIPTIC VARIATIONAL PROBLEMS
by F. J. ALMGREN
Jr.
(Princeton University)
"During t he l a st three decades the subject of geometric measure theory ha s developed from a collection of isolated special results into a cohesive body of basic knowledge with an ample natural struoture of its own, an d with strong ties to many other parts of mathematics. These advances have given us deeper perception of the analytic and topological foundat ions of ge ome t ry-, and have provided new directions to the ca lculus of variations.
Reoently the methods of geometric
measure theory have led to very substantial progress in the study of qui t e gene r a l elliptic va riational problems, including the multidimensional problem of least a r ea . " "[FRl - Preface]. The se lecture notes are intended as an introduction to the collection of mathematical techniques and results known as geometrio measure theory l argely from the point of view of certain problems arising in the calculus of variations.
1 The preparation of these lecture notes was supported in part b,y a grant from the National Science Foundation, in part by funds from the Science Rese arch Counoil in oonnection with the Symposium on Global Analysis, 1971-1972, at the Universi~ of Warwick, and in part by funds from the International Atomic Energy Agency -an d the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization in connection with the Summer College on Global Analysis and its Applications, 4 July - 25 August, 1972, a t the International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste.
- 34 -
F. J. Almgren Jr. There are six partsl PART A.
Some phenomena of geometric variational problems.
PART B.
Geometric variational problems in a mapping setting
and
associated varifolds. PART C.
Surfaces as measures.
PART D.
A regularity theorem.
PART E.
Estimates on singular sets.
PART F.
Caratheodory1s con struction for k dime nsional measure s in Rn and the structure of sets of finite Hau s dorff me a su r e .
There a r e also twenty illustrations. Figure 1.
A disk with five han dl e s .
Figure 2.
A s impl e closed unknotted boun dary cu rve C of f inite length.
Figure 3.
The oriented surface S having boun dary C an d of l e as t area ha s infinite topological type .
Figure
4.
A di sk T with infinitely man y handles converging t o a boun da ry point.
Figure .5.
The 1 dimensional set Y conn ec ting the 3 poin t s of the boun dary B and of le a st length has an interior singularity of co dimension 1.
Figure 6.
The unique minimal partitioning configuration for t wo regi ons of prescribed volumes.
Figure
7.
A "soap bubble like" minimal partitioning configu r ation consisting of six r e al an a l y t i c surface s meeting a t 1 20
0
along four smooth ar cs which meet at equ al an gles a t t wo poi n ts . Fi gu re 8.
The Mob i u s band as a s u r f a ce of l ea st a r ea .
Fi gu r e 9.
The triple Mobius ban d as a s u r f a ce of lea s t ·a r ea .
- 35 -
F. J . Almgren Jr. Figure ·1 0.
The su r fa ce S r e t ra ct s onto i ts boundary C.
Figure 11 .
A soap film with a boun dary wire which i s not closed.
Figure 12.
The curve C of lea st l engt h is not of class 2.
Figure 13.
y
Figure 14.
A di sk with tentacles.
Figure 1 5.
The one dimensional Cantor t ype set A.
Figure 16.
Polygonal estimates on
Figure 17.
The maps
Figure 18.
The sets
X(a,r,V,s).
Fi gure 19.
The s e t s
S( z,r,u, ¥).
Figure 20.
S(z,fn_l' ~n(a)exp(~o(),o<) - S( z, in-I' ''In( a) , 0<)
x1/3•
boundary(S).
Tt n•
c; X( a , 2J n _l s , v, s },
- 36 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
PART A
======
Suppose k ~ n are positive integers and one is given a n• reasonable surface S of dimension k in R
Assume also one is
given a suitable function n R
f :
JC
G(n,k)
~
+
R ;
here G(n,k) denotes the Grassmann manifold of all unoriented k dimensional planes through the origin in Rn
or, equivalently,
n the space of all k dimensional tangent plane directions in R ~(S)
Then one can define the integral~f-! over S by the formula
E(S)
S F(p,
~S
k
Here Tan (S,p)
~
Tank~s,p)) d~kp
G(n,k) denotes the k dimensional tangent plane
direction to S at p for p ~ S , and n Hausdorff measure over R Hausdorff measure of a
If.k
denotes k dimensional
defined in C.)(l).
The k dimensional
n k dimensional submanifold M of R
of
class I agrees with any other reasonable definition of the k area of M.
However, with the use of Hausdorff
make mathematically precise the notion of
k
measure, one can
k dimensional area on
- 37 -
F . J. Almgren Jr.
surfaces which may have essential s xngularities. Wi t h this terminology, there are several problems one might wish to study. ~~~~~=E~~~~~~
(existence).
Among all surfaces S having, say,
a prescribed boundary B (and possibly satisfying other constraints), is there one minimizing
~(S)?
g~~~~=E~~~~~J (regularity).
first problem, how nice is it? like a smooth
If there is a solution to the In particular, is it generally
n k dimensional submanifold of R ?
- 38 -
F. J. AJr.ngren Jr. ~M~~=E~~~~~~ (structure of singularities).
What kind of
singularities are possible in solutions to the first problem (if any)?
And if singularities are possible, what language
should one use to
de~cribe
them?
~~~~~M=E~~~~~~ (computation).
If there are solutions to the
first problem, how does one explicitly f ind them?
To make these problems mathematically precise, there are of course several questions to be' settled, namely,
(1)
I'fuat is a surface?
(2 )
What is the boundary of a surface?
(3)
What are reasonable conditions to put on F ?
(We already
have been assuming implicitly that F is ~k measurable, for example). Before attempting to answer these questions, it is perhaps usefUl to consider the these problems.
phenomena which arise when one studies
In the following examples, the integrand
F is
restricted to being identically 1 , i.e. for each (p,
'ff ) •
Rn.lC G(n,k),
F(p,,,,)
1
The problem of minimizing
- 39 -
F . J. Almgren Jr.
~(S)
thus becomes the problem of minimizing ~k(S) , in other
words, the problem of minimizing the
k dimensional area of S •
The various problems associated with minimizing area are sometimes called collectively Plateau's Problem in honor of the Belgian physicist, J. Plateau, of the last century who among other things studied the geometry of soap films and soap bubbles (see [GJl] i n this volume in this regard).
EXAMPLE 1.
Suppose C is a f ixed simple closed curve in R3 of
finite length and let DO say
DO
= R2 C'\
(x,y): x
2
denote a fixed 2 dimensional disk, + y2
~
1) .'
The first person to make
significant progress in a special formulation of the problem of least
2 dimensional area was the late J. Douglas who showed i n
particular: THEOREM [DJ]
Among all maps
such that
~DO
maps homeomorphically onto C , there exists a mapping of least 2 dimensional area
("2 dimensional area" as used in this theorem
is defined explicitly in B.6Y. Unfortunately, there are no known direct extensions of this result to higher dimensional disks.
- 40 -
.F: J. Almgren Jr. Now for
disk with
m
= I,
2, 3,
m handles (a
•••
let D denote a fixed 2 dimensional m
D appears in figure 1), and let Am
5
(Figure I)
the
denote the infimum of the areas of~mappings that
aDm
such
maps homeomorphically onto 0 (mappings realizing
this infimum area do not seem to be known to exist). can always "pinch out" a handle before mapping
Since one
D one has the m
obvious inequalities ?;
lim A m m
?; 0
•
For a curve like that sketched in figure 2 (a simple closed unknotted curve of finite length), W.H. Fleming has proved the (Figure 2) strict inequalities ,. lim
A > 0
m m
[FW].
The significance of these inequalities is that if one wishes to solve the problem of minimizing area among all oriented surfaces having boundary
minimum among oriented ~faces of fi~te topologicaJ 0, then one cannot find an absolut;
indeed, the list of
D 's is a complete topological classification m
of all compact orientable 2 dimensional manifolds having a
- 41 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
circle as boundary.
On
the other hand, there is a surface S
(sketched in figure 3) which perhaps deserves to be called the (Fiigure 3) oriented surface of least area having is a
2
C as boundary.
dimensional real analytic submanifold of
mean curvature at each point and the area of
The surface
S
S
R3
S
C
~
having
0
equals
is of infinite topological type arid is
homeomorphic with the surface
T sketched in figure 4.
(Figure 4) (the
nature of this surface
T suggests why, frequently,
homological conditions in geometric measure theory are stated in terms of the Vietoris or eech theories rather than the singular theory).
EXAMPLE 2.
Suppose
2 B consists of three points in F which
of an are the vertice~ equilateral triangle with center at Then among all
1 dimensional sets
o
S which are the un ions of
non+.rivial rectifiable arcs and through which each point of is pathwise connected to each other point, the unique set (see figure 5)
2
R •
€
of least total length consists of the union
Y
B
- 42 -
F . J . Almgren Jr.
(Figure 5) o~
the three line segments connecting the points
(The proof of this is not completely trivial).
o~
B
to
0
This problem is
as naturally posed as one could ask, the integral (length) is real
~alytic,
Y is un ique.
the boundary
B is algebraic, and the solution
Nevertheless the solution has an interior singularity 2
of codimension 1 ,namely
0 eYe R
where the three line segments
meet. EXAMPLE 3.
complex dimension let
V is a complex algebraic variety of
Sup~ose
U e f:n
k
in complex
n dimensional space
be open and bounded such that
tJ(V n U)
~n , and
is suitable
(in the language of"C.3(4) , V n U is required to be a 2 k dimensional integral current in of
V, of course, gives
2n R
~
t
n
);
the complex structure
V a natural orientation so that
V n U together with that orientation becomes an oriented (#.2k, 2k)
rectifiable and
[FHl 4.2.29].
Let
1l2k measurable subset of R2n
W be any other oriented
surface (integral current) such that W = Vn U or the 2k area of W (N(W»
aw = is
2k dimensional i(Vn U).
Then either
strictly larger than
- 43 -
F . J. Almgr-en Jr.
the -2k area of
Vf"I U q~(Vf"I U)).
Furthermore, this is true
whether or not V has singularities .
In particular, if one
wishes to solve the problem of minimizing oriented area, and really achieve the least area, then one must at times admit as singularities in the solutions to Plateau's problem at least all the singularities occuring in complex algebraic varieties. EXAA~LE
4.
R. Thorn has constructed a 14 dimensional compact
real analytic manifold integral homology class
without boundary with a
M
d
7 dimensional
which cannot be represented by any
7 dimensional smooth submanifold [TR].
On the other hand every
integral homology class of any compact smooth Riemannian manifold can be represented by an oriented surface (integral current) of least area (mass) in that class.
Thorn's example thus shows that
sometimes there can be topological obstructions to surfaces of least area being free of singularities. EXM,~LE
5.
Consider the following partitioning problem. , m~
>
o.
Them among all disjointed regions m i
there regions for which
Let
for each
i
, are
- 44 -
F. J . Almgren Jr .
Ii
n-l(Q i=l
attains a minimum value?
d'\) This problem always admits solutions
and general arguments (see D.)
[AF1]
show that except for a
(possibly empty ) compact singular set of
.I;n-l
zero~
measure,
differentiable is a Holde~ continuously~n-l dimensional submanifold of
n• R
The particular form of the problem above further
implies the real analyt.ici t y of the regular part of For
i
of
n, R of course)
= 1
volume.
u. ~
;)A.
~
the unique solution to this problem (up to isometries
For
i = 2,
is a standard n
=3
n ball of the prescribed
the unique solution (sketched in
figure 6, also sketched "blown apart")
consists of three
(Figure 6) spherical pieces meeting along a circle (in this case the circle is the compact singular set of zero~ measure referred to above and in
D.).
For 1
3 , n
=3
the solution
seems to be that
sketched in figure 7 ; note that six pieces of real analytic (Figure 7) surface meet tangentially at
120
0
along four smooth arcs
which in turn meet at two vertices tangentially as the central cone over the vertices of a regular tetrahedron (see [GJl~
- 45 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
E~~LE
6.
A Mobius band like
su~ace
(sketched in figure 8)
(Figure 8) occurs as a soap film for a wire bent in the shape of the boundary shown,
an~
also occurs as a surface of least area among
all mathematical surfaces spanning such a boundary in the sense of homology with coefficients in the integers modulo 2 (see E.2). Similarly a triple Mobius band like surface (sketched in figure
9) oocurs as a soap film for a wire bent in the shape (Figure 9)
of the boundary shown, and also ocours as a surface of least area among all mathematical surfaces which span such a boundary in the sense of homology with coefficients in the integers modulo) (see E.)). Finally a surface
S
like that sketched in figure 10
(Figure 10) (like a Mobius band on the left joined to a triple Mobius band on the right by a thin ribbon of surface, having as boundary a single simple closed unknotted curve)
C
occurs both .as a soap
film and as a mathematical minimal surface.
However, J.F. Adams
- 46 -
F . J . Almgren Jr.
has pointed out the existence of a continuous retraction (S , 0)
(0 , 0) of
~
S
onto the boundary C [RE Appendix]
so that, in no way in the sense of algebraic topology, does S "span"
O.
bound~y
of
In particular, if one wishes to regard S
C as the
then one must use alternative definitions of
boundary of a surface than those of algebraic topology
(s~e,
in
particular, the variational formulation in [AW]).
EXAMPLE 7.
Suppose one bends a wire into the shape of an t~at
overhand knot as sketched in figure lla (noteAthe two ends of the wire are free) .
Typically when such a wire is dipped in (Figure 11)
soapy water a film such as that sketched in figure lIb forms -even though the wire is not closed:
Such a film does admit a
mathematical approximation, but only with a "boundary" of substantial positive thickness.
Indeed one can prove by
tangent cone arguments (see the nice discussion of such cones in [GJl])
that such a mathematical surface is
impossible over an infinitely thin boundary of class
3.
The
significance of this, among other things, is that if one wishes
- 47 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
to construct a theo ry of min i mal surfaces which in particular include s th e phenomena sugge st ed by s oap f i lms , t he n one mu st at t i mes
a~~it
EXAMPLE. 8 . among all
bound a rie s of
Suppose
B
L l
U
L u 2
C and
C'
of leas t t ot al l ength ,
L 3
L l
[(x ,y) : y
3-1/2(2 + x)
-2
L 2
[( x, y ) : y
3-1/2(2 - x )
l/2
L 3 and
lying i n R2~ [(x,y) ; X2 + y2 ~ 1)
B are pathwi s e connected t o each other t here a r e
exactly two di stinct s ets C l
S
C'
Then
un ions of nontrivial rect ifiable arcs··through whi ch
the poi nt s of
wher e
posi t ive thicknes s .
2 [(- 2 , 0) , (2 , 0)] c:: R .
=
1 dim ens i onal se t s
whi ch are
subst ~~tial
~
x
~
_l/2]
! x ~
2) ,
J,
1/2 2 [( x, y) : y = (1 - x )1/2 , _3-1/2 ~ x ~ 3 is th e image of
( s ee f igure 12).
C under reflect ion a cro s s the x axis
Thi s problem i s naturall y pose d , t h e i nt egral ( Figure 12)
~ length)
i s r eal analyt ic, th e boundary
[( x,y): x 2 + y2< lJ
B and the obs tacle
are algebr a ic , and t here are exac tly two
solutions (a t rivi al modifi cation
m~{ e s
the s olu ti on un ique).
Nevertheless each solut ion cu rve , although a
1 dimensional
- 48 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
2 R
submanifold of
of class 1, is no t a submani f ol d of class 2.
The tangent l ines of
hf!.wever , CiAdo vary in a Lipschitzian mann er ,
C and
hence a f orti ori Holder cont inuously (see EXAMPLE 9.
Suppose
B =
[(0,-1), (0,1)).
2 1 dimen s ional set C in R of
B .i s , of course,
(see figure l3a).
C
D.3~
of least length connecting the points
= R 2n
Now let
Th en the unique
(x, y):
x
f: R2~ R2
= ° , -1 ~
y ~ 13
be the algebraic
(Figure 13) di f f eomor phi sm gi v en by integrand f
F: R
2
x
G(n , l)--to
to giv e a new integrand
that t he
uniq~e
= (x
f(x, y)
G
+
h)
= f#
1 di mensional set
Y3 , y ). tr~~forms
F
-1
~
x
~
(see figure l3b).
implies the ellipticity of y
= xl / 3
G
g
D of least feB)
D i s also t he graph of the f unct i on 1
naturally under
with t he obvious propert y
among those se ts connec ting t he points of Not e that
Th e length
is y
integral D
= f(C)
= xl / 3
for
The ellipticity (D.l(1)(2)) of
F
and it i s clear that the ·functi.on
is t h e unique natural solut ion t o the real analyt ic
elliptic Eul er-Lagrange differential equ a t ion a ssociated with and the standard (x, y) coordi na t es for
2 R
(see D. 2 ) .
This
G
- 49 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
fUnction is not even of class 1, however (although it is real analytic except for a compact singular set of zero
L1
measure -
a representative. conclusion for such problems (see C.l(5)(d»).
- 50 -
F. J : Almgren Jr.
PART B
D.l
X~~~~~~g~~1=~~g£~~m~=~~=~=m~g~~~~=~~~~~~~: Suppose
one is given a suitable open set
./'t an
W in
appropriate space of mappings
with fl~ W prescribed. reasonable function
Rk•
We will denote by
f: closure
W-+ Rn , perhaps
We will suppose also we are given a
~: ./t, ~ R
In case
k
o ,
n
=1
, then
~can be regarded as, say, the space of class 1 mappings ~:
R -+R , and t h e basic problem which led to the different ial
calculus was t hat of finding a point where j value.
assumes its maxi mum
Equivalently one could seek those points where ][ takes
its minimum value, or, more generally, one could seek critical points of
~ ~
vanishes.
In case
, i.e. points at which the first derivative
~~ ~
k! 1 , n ~ 1 , then, heuristically at least,
the basic problem of the calculus of variations (in this context) is that of finding points (actually mappings a t which (most commonly)
i
assumes its minimum value, or, more
gen er al l y , the critical points of variation
d~
n) f: closure W ~ R
i ,
i.e. wh er e the first
vanishes ident icall y ( in pr a ct i ce the definition
- 51 -
F . J. Almgren Jr .
of first variation varies considerab1y from problem to problem). In a nUmber of ways, as the above phraseology suggests, there are analogies between calculus .and the calculus of
variatio~s.
The
ordinary calculus has been extended to differential .manifolds in various fashions, and it is sometimes useful to regard certain problems· i n the calculus of variations in. the language of the ordinary calculus, but extended to manifolds having infinite dimensions.
These manifolds of infinite dimension typically are
"modelled on" Hilbert spaces or Banach spaces.
Unfortunately,
such infinite dimensional manifolds so far have not played a significant role in the geometric variational problems with which we are mainly
conce~ed
The functions
here.
i:.It ~ R which
have received the greatest
mathematical attention in higher dimensions are integrals of the form (*)
I
(f) =
Here
ep:
with
i .
Vi
K
S
xeW
f(x, f(x), Df(x))
~
dX2 ...
d~
' f,"
/to
Rn ~ Hom(Rk, Rn) --+ R+ is the integrand associated
For example, the Dirichlet integrand .
'f D is given by
- 52 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
Another example is the
k dimensional area integrand
'A which
is defined by setting
CPA (x, f(x), Df(x» here AkDf(X) :
1\ Rk
= 11 /\
Df( x) 1\
~ 1\ k Rn and
Il-\Df(X) 1/
the square root of the sum of the squares of all the of the n by n
is equal to k by k
minors
Jacobian matrix ..li!-(x) ~~ 2
ax1
~f (x)
if(x) ~
1
1
~ f (x) ch 2
Jf (x) aX k
2
2
...2.!
~f (x) c)x
cl~
2
(x)
~~(x)
~2
As
~ndicated,
weare primarily
i
corresponding to geometric integrands .
conc~rned
with geometric iXitegrals Several definitions
are in order.
B.3 DEFINITIONS. (1)
A funf'tion
i: rh~R+
parametric form if and only if
i
is called an integral in
has the form
(*)
above and,
- 53 -
F. J.Almgren Jr.
in adlii tion, for each
f
&
c/t i
!(f)
ep:
A function
(2)
and each diffeomorphism Ig: W~ Vi ,
IV
(feg)
n R
1<
X
Hom (R
k
,
Rn)~ R
is
called an integrand in parametric form i f and 'Only if the
~:c/'t~R defined by
function
(*)
is an integral in parametric
form. (3) integral
I: 4
A function
~ R+ is called a geometric
~ has the form
if and only if
(*)
and, in addition,
there exists a function G{n,ky ---:, R+
such that for each
'! (f) Here
=
p
f
Go
S Q
f{IV)
N{ f, p) = card f-
~;
_
F[p, Tank{f{IV) , p)] N{f,p) l
[P}
for each
p
Q
d ![kp •
f{ W)
called a geometric integrand i f and only if the function defined by
(*)
B.4 REMARK.
~
is a geometric integral.
To the best of my knowledge the ' expression
"integral in parametric form" was introduced by C.B. Morrey, Jr. to
- 54 -
F. J : Almgren Jr.
suggest that the appropriate integrals to be stuaied over
parametr~c
surfaces (surfaces which are not the graphs of functions) are integrals in parametric form [ fflCl].
This terminology has been
a source of confusion, however, since, in particular, integrals in parametric form are precisely the integrals of form
(*) which
do not depend on the parametrization of the domain. For sufficiently nice
f e
u1r it
is clear that any geometric
integral has the i nvar i an ce property characteristic of integrals in parametric form. and
In case the maps in ~ are Lipschitzian
Tank(f( W), p) is understood to mean the
(IF
Lt(W), k )
approximate tangent cone, Tank(,J/k L f(W)" k)[FID. 3.2.l6J, then any geometric integral is indeed an integral in parametric form. Also, in case class 2, range
i
is an integral in parametric form Which is of
!
Co
R+, and
i
is independent of orientation,
then C.B. I.1or r ey , Jr. has shown that
i
is a geometric integral
[l.iCl] .
Integrals in parametric form, and
~~ometric
i nt egr al s i n
par t i cul ar , are of special geo metric significance s ince t he value of the integr al depends only on the geo me try of on the particular
f( IV)
and not
parametrization whi ch produces it.
I know of no natural geometric, phy sical, or bi ol og l Cal problems
- 55 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
involving integrals in parametriG form
whic~
are not also
geometric integrals. The
k dimensional area integrand i s an example of a
geometric i nt egr and while the Dirichlet i nt egran d is neither a geometric i nt egran d not an integrand in parametric form. One refers to a varuat i onaj, problem as :being a geometric variational nroblem in case the
~nly
integrals which arise in
the problem are geometric integrals.
The greatest initial difficulty with the study of geometric variational problems (in the mapping setting) i s that, in general, there is no straightforward way to obtain solutions by t he s o called direct met hod of the calculus of vari ations.
The term
"direct method of the calculus of variations" is u s ed loosely in a number of different contexts.
Roughly speaking the "direct
method" makes sense in a variational problem when the formulation of the problem itself guarantees the existence of a sequence (fiji
of mappings in ~, any sui tabl e convergent (in ~)
subsequence of whi ch would yi el d a s olutlon to the problem;
- 56 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
for example, if one seeks a minimum for lim.!(f .) 1 1
inf
!
2,
one might have
The direct method of the calculus of
variations is applicable wh en sequences
[f
i
ji
as above do , .~
fact admit subsequences convergent to solutions. The main difficulties wh i ch I know about in the attempt "0 use the direct method in geometric variational problems seem best illustrated by examples. B. 6 EXAMPLES.
Suppose
k
=2
, n
=3
,
R2 fl [ (x,y): X2 + Y2 <
w
consists of all Lipschitzian mappings f: closure
for
f
£.It. !
W~ R3
such that
is, of course, the
f(x,y)
=
(x,y,O) e
R3
2 dimensional area integral.
Suppose one is given the geometric variational problem of finding h ~
/t such
that
'j (h) = inf
is, of course, such a mapping.
i.
The mapping
h(x,y)
=
(x,y,O)
However, in g ener a l , there is
- 57 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
no reason for a minimizing sequence to admit a reasonable convergent subsequence as the following examples show: (1) in
Let
R3 with rational coordinates.
. sequence [Pl
3 Pl , P2 ' P3 ' .•. e R
,
P2
lim
with
,
... , Pi~
C
i
i
f . (VI)
for each
~
h(W)
One can construct a minimizing
j (f ) = inf ~ = 7f
example by deforming the map h out of the flat disk
be a list of the points
= 1, 2, 3,
...
,
for
above by pulling thin "+'entacles" R3
in
i
such that
as indicated in figure 14,
(Figure 14) the total area of which "tentacles" is no more than l/i. this case, each point in
(2)
Let
and define for
R3
is a limit point of the sequence
W be given the usual polar coordinates i = 1,2,3,
Clearly the sequence above problem.
(hogiJi
However,
(r,e)
the diffeomorphisms
g .(r,9) = «l/i)r + (1 - l/i)r ~
:::n
i
, e).
is a minimizing sequence for t te
- 58 -
F•. J , Almgren Jr.
for x
l im . (hog .) (x,y) ~
~
lim. (hog . ).(x,y) ~
~
=
(x,y,O)
for
x
2
2
+ y2 < 1 ,
2
+ Y
= 1
so that no suitable convergent subsequences exist.
i : ,/'f -'R+
Suppose F:
n
R
)/
'i
=
=
llJ
T f(P)
N
f ~ or"
plf(W) F[p, Tank(f(W), p)]
Now define for
and
+ R , and for each
G(n,k)~
(f)
is a geometric integral,
Ilk
L
fe W)
almost all
k n (p,Tan (f(W), p»e R
It
N(f,p) dllkp •
n
R.
p~
G(n,k) ,
note that one can write
I
(f)
IR
=
n
F0
ljJf
d
[Il k
t, N (f ,
.) ]
which equivalently -can be written,
I(f) = in which
I F R x G(n,k)
~fll
measure over
[i{k L N(f, .)]
n)/ R
is Lipschi tzian). and
F.
d[~f# [-&lk
LN(f,
.)]3
determines a unique Radon
G(n,k) (assuming, say,
W is bounded and
Note that this measure is independent of
A definition is in order.
1
f
- 59 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
B.8 DEFINITION [AW]. n R
By a
k dimensional varifold in
n one means a Radon measure over R x
the space of all
G(n,k),
k dimensional varifolds in
is a bound.ed open set in Rk
f: W--') Rn
and
n
~kCR ) flenotes
Rn•
In case
W
is Lipschi tzian
one denfl"&es by
.i.'#
Ivil
~k(Rn)
Q
'fJf # [~k
the varifold' eorresponding to
1. N(r, .)] as in B. 7
above. B.9
REMARK.
As was noted in B.7,
One can also verify, in a reasonably straightforward manner, that for each
f ~
4
and each diffeomorphism
so that clearly the mapping by its associated varifold
g:
W ~IV ,
f ~ cit is not uniquely determined f~lwl. 11"
Of interest, however, is
the fact that spaces of Radon measures have very strong convergence properties in the weak topology. B.lO over
DEFINITION. G(n,k)
In the present context we have :
A sequence
(vJ i
of Radon measures
(i.e. a sequence of elements of
- 60 -
F . J. Almgren Jr. is said to converge weakly to a limit Radon measure . V if and only i f for each continuous function with compact support,
J
F
B.ll [ViJ i
[v. ~ ~j
F:
n)( R
+
G(n,k) - . R
dV
A sufficient condition that a seauence
PROPOSITION.
of Radon measures over
n)(' R G(n,k)
contain a subsequence
which converges weakly to some limit Radon measure
j
o
is that for each
B.12
r
<
EXAMPLES.
<
V
00
Let us return to the examples of
B.6
above which illustrated the difficulties of the attempt to use the direct method i n geometric variational problems. corr~sponding
(1)
Let
We have
examples . [fiJ i
be as in
B.6(1).
Then i t is easily
verified that (weakly) where in
h(x,y) = (x,y,O)
B.6.
disk in
Geometrically, 2 R
>t
(03
Co
as in
B.6
is a solution to the problem
h#lwi corresponds to the unit flat
R3 which "solves" the problem, but without
a particular parametrization prescribed for that disk.
- 61 -
F . J. 'Alm gr-en Jr.
(2)
Let
[gi}i
be as in B.6(2J above.
Then also
(weak ly)
h.,(L\wl tr
- 62 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
PART C
======
been suggested by the various examples and discussion in Parts A and B, one approach to the study of geometric variational problems is based on a correspondence between suitable surfaces and measures on appropriate spaces.
Indeed, the natUral setting
for geometric problems in the calculus of variations seems to 06 that in which surfaces are regarded as intrinsically part of RL n) (in particular as measures on spaces associated with R ratt6~ than as mappings from a fixed
k dimensional manifold, even
though with this approach one is not able to use the traditiona: methods of functional analysis for showing the existence of solutions. (1)
The main reasons for doing this are the following: Mappings from a fixed compact
k dimensional manifold
cannot take into account the phenomena of the examples given in Part A.
For example, one cannot consider surfaces of infinite
topological type, surfaces having singularities not realizable by mappings like the singular curve of the triple Mobius band, or surfaces haVing boundaries defined in certain ways.
- 63 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
(2)
Many significant results have been obtained. from the
study'of geometric variational problems in the measure theoretic setting
~n
contrast with the virtual absence of · such results in
hi gher dimensions and codimensions in the mapping setting. [AW] [AFl] [FlU. 5][FH2][GJl] (3)
It seems reasonable to hope that once the singularities
of the measure theoretic solutions are
under.stood, one will be
able to solve the mapping problem as a consequence. (4) theory
Topological methods analogous to those of Morse's
are availaole in the measure theoretic setting i n
contrast with the absence of such methods in the mapping setting[AF2]. For example, the "Condition COl of Palais and Smale CPS] is not satisfied by any geometric variational problem (no t e B. 6 ) . (5)
The techniques developed in the study of geometric
problems in a measure theoretic setting have aided in the solution of r elated problems. (a)
For example:
The basic theorems of
cl ass~cal
integral geometry
have been proved in wha t seems to be thp.ir most natural setting[BJ]. (b)
Various long standing qu es t i on s in the theory of
Lebesgue area have 'be en settled [FH3].
- 64 -
F. J . Almgren Jr.
(c)
Extens~ons
of Bernstein's
~heorem
that a globally
defined nonparametric minimal hypersurface must be a hyperplane have been proved in dimensions up to 8 and counterexamples have been shown to exist in higher dimensions [FHl 5 ·4.l8][BDG]. (d)
Proofs have been given of the regularity
almos~
everywhere of "weak" solutions to some nonlinear elliptic systems of partial differential equations, and examples exhibited which show sometimes unique solutions to such systems contain
esse~t~al
discontinuities [MC2][GM]. (6)
In the measure theoretic setting,
many important
natural geometric constructions are available, the analogues of which i n spaces of mappings seem unnatural. C.2
RE~aARK.
The geometric measure theorist routinely
works with a number of different measures and measure theoretic surfaces.
The following definitions
ar.~
terminology both are
representative of the most common "surfaces" of the geometric measure theorist and enable a careful statement to be made of sQme of the regularitr and singularity results in Parts D an d
~.
- 65 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
C.3
DEFINITIONS AND TERMINOLOGY.
g"ppose
0
~
k
~
n
are integers. For each
(1)
n
A c:: R
the
k dimensional Hausdilrff
A, denoteq ~k(A), is the greatest lower bound of
measvre of I
all' t
such that
0 ~ t ~
countable covering
I
and for every ·
t10
It ~
0 there exists a
A with
G of
ClC.(k) [diam (5)/2l
56 G
~
t
[FlU 2J
(2)
A subset
n A c R is called (~k, k) rectifiable
if and only if irk(A) < ~ compact class
and there exists for each
k dimensional differential submanifold 1 such that Itk(A -
M() -e , .
measurable one can choose M
E
In case
(3)
measurable,
/I All
defined by requiring B c
n R , and
A
Co
so that Rn
is
ME
In case
It k ([A
-J
£
> 0
u
of
n R
cf
A is Ilk M J u · [M £
f
,oJ
AJ)< e •
(Jlk, k ) rectifiable and Ilk
~k L A denotes the measure over Rn
dl k
LA)(B)
Tank(1t k L. A , a)
approximate t angent cone to
A at
=
itk( Afl B)
denotes the
for each
("Il k
a. [ FHl 3.2.161.
, k) For It kL. A
- 66 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
almost all
a
orientation for A
w:
~.
--t
n, R
in
Ais a:n Jtk
GO(n,k)
(a) = Ta:nk(1f k
Co)
Ta:nk(ll
n R
L..
LA, a)
L.
A , a).
a:nd ~: GO(n,k)
Eo
G (n,k).
An
A measurable function
such that for Ilk
ma:nifold of all oriented in
k
Here
a e A ,
a i -_Jst all GO(n,k)
is the Grassmann
k dimensional pla:nes through the origin
--+ G(n,k)
is the natural projection.
The pair
(A, w) is called a:n oriented (Uk, k ) rectifiable
a:nd Ilk
measurable subset of (4)
If
A
Co
n R
n. R
is (Ilk, k) rectifiable a:nd" k
measurable, the integral varifold associated with IA\ ' is the Radon measure over [~ n R
It
A Radon measure
n R
defined by
k .Jl,k ;;k Ta:n ('I L A, .) J# [" V 6
n) ¥k (R
A, denoted
L.
AJ
is called a:n integral varifol d
if a:nd only if it is a finite or convergent infinite sum of measures
[I Ai I J:i.
corresponding to (Ilk, k ) rectifiable and
~k measurable subsets ~, A2, A
3,
•••
of
n• R
The most
accessible source for the basic theorems about varifolds is to which the readers attention is strongly directed.
[A~ J
- 67 -
E . J. Atmzr-en Jr.
n A k dimensional curren~in R
(5)
is a continuous
n of linear. functional on the snace gk(R all differential forms
)1.
of d.egree
k
and class
n• R
on
o:l
If · k ;> .0
k-l dimensional current defined by setting
If E: Cek-l
Suppose the pair
here d
;
each
If''' T(
gk ,
If )
=
pL ('"
n R
(p),
here we are identifying simple unit all
If')
= T (d ey )
A is bounded.
and (A,~)
cr
The rectifiable
is given by requiring for
(p)
Go(n,k)
with the submanifold of all A
k vectors in the Grassmann vectorspace
k vectors in
F
n
as a
If' is the exterior derivative of f
associated with
T
oT(
~:
is an oriented (Ilk , k ) rectifiable
(A, Col)
and measurable subset of current
T is a
n, R then the boundary or
k dimensional current in
for each
and
A k dimensional current
"k T
in
Rn n R
of is
called rectifiable if and only if it is the finite or. convergent infinite sum of rectifiable currents associated with oriented rect ifiable and above.
Jl k
measurable subsets of
A k di mens i onal current
i nt egr al current in
n R
T
is called a
if an d only i f both
T
R11
as
k dimens ional and ~T
are
- 68 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
rectifiable currents (for
k = 0 , there is no requirement
regarding . ~T which, of course, is not defined). The most basic theorems about integral currents in general are thp deformation theQrem [FHl 4.2.9J, the compactness theorem [FHl ~.2.17J, and the approximation theorem [FHl 4.2.20J. readers
The
attention is strongly directed to these fundamental
_:·:- ~ t s .
The compactness theorem alone is the essential ingredient in
~~~y
existence results for elliptic geometric problems by the direct method.
The necessary lower
ellipticity.
sem~continuity
One USUally takes as the "k dimensional area"
k dimension integral current
a
denoted
T
in
Rn
the mas s of
T
:" : ~
,
M(T), defined by setting
~ (T) = sup Note that
follows from the
~2T)
fT( If ): tp " 2~(T)
s>.
sup
I crt s
1.)
so that, in par-t icul.ar , the mass
C1;
can be much larger thp~ Jrk(spt T).
T
(6)
In a natural way rectifiable currents may be regarde :
as having the integers as "coefficient group".
For each int c:<:-e:"
-.
11 ~ 2 , the k dimensional flat chains mo dulo 11 in Rn defined essentially as the quot i ent subgroup of the group of
a :'d
F. J. Almgren Jr.
n R
k dimensional rectifiable currents in homomorphism
Z. ~ 7l.!( 2
7L).
induced by the
Theorems corresponding to the
deformation theorem, the compactness theorem, and the approximation theorem hold for flat chains modulo
"j
. [FHl 4.2.26].
- 70 -
F . J . Almgren Jr.
In this part we give a careful statement of a very general regularity result for solutions to elliptic geometric variational problems. D.l
DEFINITIONS.
(1)
An integrand
with ellipticity bound
c
following condition holds. k dimensional disk and of
n R
--
G (n,k) -+ R+is ca:'leJ eilbt ic
FO:
S
if and only if Suppose
D
f:
n n R --. R
follows that
dD G S) .
(2)
An integrand
n R
C
>
0
and the
is a flat
is a compact (~k, k) rectifiable su~ ~ , "
which can not be mapped into
function
c
such that
dD by any Lipschitzian f'{p )
=
p
for p
&
dD
+
F:
such that for each
p _ RN,
bound
FP:
'7f e.
G(n,k).
(it
Then
G (nk) --" R
i s called
elliptic i f and only if there is a continuous function
c(p) ; here
"'---'-
~
c : Rn -+ R+
i s elliptic with ellipticity +
G(n,k)-R,
~ ('J1') = F( p, "If )
for
- 71 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
()
Suppose
t
0
~
CIC
1
<
R+ _
.i
~d
R+
is
monotonically nondecreasing with l'
t-(l+~)
Suppose also Let
S
Co
cl os t:d .
:a
dt
n
<.
+
x
R
be
(/tic, k) rectifiable and
n
R
G (n,k) - . . R
One says that
S
is
=' ,.e
(S f"\ [z: cr(z)
I
I> 0
z])
[1
B Co
Rn ,..,
S
sucn that
~
~ (r)] F ( [S" (z: ep
+
be
minimal with respect :;\:;
)
(F
i f and. only if there exists
~
is elliptic and of class 3.
F:
(z)
I z)])
whenever (a)
n
R
n ~ R
is Lipschi tzian,
(b) [[z: ep (z ) I z] U'P [z: (c) r = diam ([z:'
RE~~RK .
In case
I
z]
If (z ) I
Ulf
k = n-l
(z:
zJ ] () B
f
(z)
I
=
zj) <
the ellipticity of
D.l(2) above is equivalent to the uniform convexity of ,ea ch
n ps.R •
For all
y! ,
F
cf
in
pP for
k, the set of elliptic integrands
as
i n D.l(l) contains a convex neighborhood in the class 2 topology of the f:
k dimensional area integrand.
n, n R ~ R
f# F
Also for each
is elliptic if and only if
F
diffeomorph~sm
is, for
f
- 72 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
as in D.l(2).
Finally the elliptiCity of
various Euler-Lagrange
equ8+·~ns
F implies that the
which arise are nonlinear
strongly elliptic systems of partial Q1Iferential equations, and, "in the small", the ellipticity of
F
is equivalent to
the strong ellipticity of these equations. D.3
THEOREM [AF1].
D.l(3) above and that
S
Suppose ~
(E,~)
F, S, B are as in
~,
at,
minimal with respect to B
,Then k (1) hk([s ·.- spt(ll ,\.. S)] u
[spt(ll k
It k
[spt(/l]<:
(b) spt(ll of
Rn
k
of class 1
L-
L. S) 1"\
S) U
S) -
U of
n R
(U u B) ]
=0
(2) Ther e exists an open subset (a)
l-
is a
with tangent
Holder continuously with exponent
(S u B)]
0
such that ,
k dimensional submanifold ~ planes which locally. vary oe..
The special interest of this theorem is that the hypotheses are SUfficiently weak to , apply to all the natural constrained geometric variational problems of w4ich yield rectifiable sets. 2, 5, 6, 7, 8
in Part
The
whi c ~
I
kn O\l', '
~urfaces
the 1Jol u t i o"'\s of
discussed ,i n examples
A come 1n t his category in particular.
- 73 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
Very little is known at the present time about the structure of the singular sets of solutions to general elliptic geometric variational problems, except for their existence.
However, for
the area integrand there has been substantial progress.
The
following three theorems are representative of the present state of lrnowledge. E.l
THEOREM [FH2]. Rn
current in (1) in
Rn
Let
such that
There exists an
such that
dT =B
~B
B be an
= O.
n-2 dimensional
inte~~s:
Then
n-l dimensional integral current
T
and
~(T) = inf [~(S): S ~ n-l dimensional integral curren~ in (2)
n R
and
~ S = B3
There exists an open set U in (a)
io at most
The Hausdorff dimension of
Rn
such that
spt T ,.., (U v
spt B)
n-8.
(b) submanifold of
spt T n U is an Rn
having
n-l dimensional real analytic
0 mean curva!ure at each point.
- 74 -
F. J. P.Ur.ngren Jr.
E.2
-Let . 1.s k
THEOREM [FH2].
:t
k-l dimensional flat chain modulo 2 in
(1) n ~ R
There exists a
and let
n R
such that
B be a ~B
=0
k dimensional flat chain T modulo 2
such that
~(T) = inf
~(S):
S
is a
k dimensional flat chain Rn
modulo 2 in (2)
There exists an open set (a)
is at most
E.3
spt T " n R
U
such that,
spt T -
(U
\J
spt B)
having
R3
~here
mean curvature at each point.
0
such that exists a
such that
~
k dimensional real analytic
~
THEOREM [GJ2]. ' Let
modulo 3 in
modulo 3
Rn
U in
B)
k-2.
submanifold of
(1)
~S =
and
The Hausdorff dimension of
(b)
M0T)
n
B be a
; ;3 '-
O.
1 dimensional flat chain
Then
2 dimensional flat chain
T
aT = B and
[M(S): S is a modulo 3
2 dimensional flat chain in
R3
and
- 75 -
F . J . Almgren Jr. '
(2)
class 1
spt T (a)
A
~
(b)
C
~
R
C
=0
AU
C
~
,
1 dimensional submanifold of
R3
(d) such that
is a
A
3 having
0
2 dimensional real analytic submanifold
mean curvature at each point,
Each point
c/Y'" A
Furthermore for each
p
in
has exactly i,
A.
~
C
haa an open neighborhood
3
components, say ~, A
u (cAP 11 .
2
C)
REMARK.
See [GJl]
cI1I' A
3
•
is a Holder
continuously differentiable manifold with boundary, and
E.4
2!
with tangent lines which locally vary Holder' continuously. (c)
.Qf.
apt B
,-v
whenev e~
for a complete
classification of the interior local structure of mathematical "soap bubble" and "soap film" like surfaces, inc;"''l.ing the first mathematical verification of the century old "axioms of · Plateau".
- 76 -
-
F. J. Almgren Jr.
PART F
Caratheodory's construction for k dimensional measures in >Rn and the stru~ture
REFERENCES.
of sets of finite Hausdorff measure.
This part is based on and intended as a partial introduction
to sections 2.10.1, 2.10.2, 2.10.5, 2.10.6, 3.3.1, 3.3.2, 3.3.5, 3.3.13, and 3.3.19 F.l.
of [FH1] • The problems of
~
dimensional area.
A basic mathematical
objective in the study of k dimensional area in Rn has been the creation of a theory of measure and integration over k dimensional sets in Rn•
it
is now generally accepted that the cornerstone to such a theory lies in the creation and study of suitable k dimensional measures in Rn•
For such
measures to be geometrically viable they should be Borel regular (i.e. Borel sets are measurable and every set is contained>in a Bote1 set of equal measure) and invariant under Euclidean isometries.
For
k=n the
n n n dimensional Lebesgue measureL over R is characterized by these two conditions together with the requirement .(n { For
k < n
Xl
0 ~'t~ 1
for i = 1, ••• , nJ '" 1.
there are a number of distinct k dimensional measures (some
of which are discussed in F.2) which are Borel regular, invariant under Euclidean isometries, and assign to subsets of k dimensional submanifo1ds of class 1 the "correct number".
Much of geometric measure theory during
the first half of this century consisted of detailed studies of peculiar Cantor type sets on which the various k dimensional measures disagree. such set occurs as an example in F.4. n,
A second bas ic objective of the study of k dimensional area in R
of course intimately tied to the first, is the understanding of the
One
- 77 -
li' ,
J . Almgren Jr.
geometric struoture imposed on a set by the requirement that it have fini te k dimensional area.
The stud3' of the pathology mentioned above
has led to a general pattern of structure (in large measure due to A. S. Besicovitoh originally, and later H. Federer) the central results of whioh are discussed in F.5.
F.2
n• Caratheodo;r's construction for k dimens ional measures ·in ·R
The ingredients of Caratheodory's construction arel n• (a) a family of subsets F of R
If F is such a family and
0 -c
~
~
one sets F,s (b) a function
SI F-~tl 0 ~ t ~
Corresponding to eaoh ~
0.( 6 ~
aD].
~ ~
00
eq.
b
approximating measure
ql,t
given by the formula
= inf
The measure ~
F (\ iSI diam(S) ~
\I'
l
L:
S E: G
$(S)I GC
F~
called ~ ~
i ll
countable and A C UG}
.!!! Cllrathe 0 dory , s
,A
c a",
oonstruction ~
1
F is given b,y the formula
Severai
dis tinot ~°'lsures obtained b,y 6arathe 0 dory 's cons truction are
desoribed by the chart belowl
0<:
MEASURE
SYMBOL
k dimensional Hausdorff measure
k dimensional spherical measure k dimensional integral-~ometric measure with exponent t, 1 ~ 1;,-«00 ~ d~mensional
when t '" 1 unnamed for
Gillespie measure
1 -< t
j{k
"gk
J
k. t
lQ~
F
all nonempty subsets of Rn (equivalent!y, all nonempty closed or open subsets of Rn
j(A)
for A € F
~(k)(diam(A)/2)k
all closed balls in Rn all Eorel subsets of Rn all nopen convex subsets of R
(t (1p(G(n,k)~
.-
k t ) lit G(n,k)(L (pA)) d(n,kP k
(pQ))
t
~n,kP
) lit --J
co
.(00
k dimensional Gross measure k dimensional Caratheodory measure k dimensional integral-geometric measure with exponent 00
§k
ek
=~
J:;'
all Borel subsets of Rn all nopen convex subsets of R all Borel subsets of Rn
sup .,(k(pA) 'p e: G(h,k)
ess sup £k(pA) PEG(n,k)
"J
;-< :P
8'
(Jq
'1
(1)
::l
'-< '1
- 79 -
F. J. Almgren Jr . In the chart above,
Q -_ Rnn SI xr O!- x 3., ~_ 1
G(n,k) of
f or 3.' = 1 , ... , k an d x
j
= 0 f
1, or J' = ' k -1, ••• , nj
is the Grassmann manifold of all k dimensional linear subspaces
If, is the orthogonally invariant Radon measure over G(n,k) for
~n,k
which
dt k
Ifn, k(G(n,k)) = i , denotes the Lebesgue k dimensional measures over eleme=ts of O(n,k)
defined in the obvious manner, G(n,k)
is also identified with the spaoe of all orthogonal projections
p of Rn onto k dimensional linear subspaces of Rn qy associating to the projection p the 'linear subspace
p(Rn).
- 80 -
F . J . Almgren Jr.
F.3.
Observations about the measures resulting from Caratheodory's
construction. ~t: 0:;; t ;;
and
.0/
Suppose F is a family Qf subsAts of an,
""J
~ 0< ~ ~
00, CPJ
is the size
S
approximating measure,
t
is the result of Caratheodory1s construction from
(1)
~
SI F
on F.
n All open subsets (hence all ~ ~ ~ sUbsets) of ·R are
measurable.
To see this one first recalls:
CARATHEOIDRY I S CRITERION FOR MEASURABILITY. ~ ~
space X,
ill
l!!. ~ j!
open subsets of X ~ jA- measurable
measures
g!:!l!!
only
g jA (A U B) ~ r(A) + /,,(B)
whenever A, Be X ~ dist(A, B) > 0 [FHl 2.3. 2( 9)1 Clearly if A, BeRn, dist(A, B) > ~~(AUB) =
b , then
(f(~A) +
from which it follows that
'f(AU B) (2)
If
ill ~
4J(A) + lV(B).
=
members of F ~ Borel sets, ~
ssssx.
subset of
n R is contained in ~ ~ ~ ~ equal ~ measure and ljJ
let A C Rn be given, and choose
00
00
for each
for · each
such that AC
v
.
U
i =l
Borel
To s e e this, assume all the members of F are Borel sets,
regular measure.
2, 3,
.!!!. ~
S~
1:
and
i=l
J.
The set
S(S~) -< = Glb(A) +
b
Ih
n U S~ v=l i =l 00
T
J.
~
J.
is a Borel set containing A such that
n 00
j =l
Tl/ ' J
~(A)
=
q>~ (T&).
The set
Y = 1,
- 81 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
is a Borel set containing A such that ~(A)
= ~(TO)'
One notes, in particular, that the several measures
def1ne~
on
the chart above are all Borel regular measures.
(3)
.5 1:!.
If ~
family F is invariant ~ Euclidean isometi'ies ~
invariant ~ ~ transformations
isomefries, ~ l.jJ
1::!.
E.!
F induced ~ Euclidean
invariant under Euclidean isometries.
the several measures defined on the chart above are all
In particuiar,
invarian~
under
Euclidean isometries.
(
4)
.fu
measures
10k ill. ,
ok
Jd
ok ,tXt'
Rk
G1k
~t' ~ (f
.
~ ~ ~ k
dimensional Lebesgue measureotk (~ precisely the orthogonal inclusion image
E.!
the standard k dimensional Lebesgue measure) ~ k dimensional
~ subspaces
E.!
Rn•
As was noted above, Lebesgue k dimensional measure
over Rk i s characterized by its Borel rsgularity, its invariance under Euclidean isometries, and the condition £.k(Rkn ~x: 0 ~ xi ~ 1
for
i = 1, ... , k}) = 1.
In view of (1), (2), (3) above it i s not difficult to show that sufficient to veritY (4) are the equ a lities .J{k(Q) = Jk(Q) = J~(Q) = tl~(Q) = ~k(Q) = 1. These equalities follow almost immediately from the definitions and the Vi tali covering theorem. [FHl 2.8.7] •
(5)
E.!
.fu
measures J{k,
J k, d~, &2~, ~
k dimensional submanifolds of Rn
~
E.! ~
Cfk
subsets .
1 ~ assign such subsets
"correct" k dimensional measure.
local.
~~~
The problem is, of course, purely n f: Rn_R is Lipschitzian, then for
One notes first that i f
and A C Rn, j{k(f(A»
~ (LiP(f»kj(k(A),
...,gk(f(A»
s
(Lip(f»kj{k(A).
- 82 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
Since each k dimensional submanifold of an of class 1 is locally the image of an open subset of a k dimensional linear subspace of an under a class 1 diffeomorphism
g: Rn~ Rn
with Lip(g)
very close to 1, the asserted equality between J{k,
and Lip(g-l)
Jk
rea sonable definition of the "correct" value follows. addi tionally that if such that
f: Rn _
Rn
,>
Lip(f) and Lip(f-l)
~
( pE.G(n,k)
both
and any
One notes
is a bilipschi tzian diffeomorphism are very c]~se to 1, then
cfhpf(Q))t dh'n k P\ lit , ')
S J.k(pQ)t dOn , kP)l!t (pEG(n,k) is very close to 1.
The equality of l>(k,J
k,
j~, :Q~, and CJk on
k dimensional submanifolds of Rn of class 1 is now essentially a consequence of the Vitali covering theorem and the obvious behavior of these measures under homothetic maps Rn----1> Rn (L e. uniform expansions and contractions).
(6)
For each
A eRn,
where
The right hand inequality follows since each subset B of Rn is contained within a ball of diameter is that Jk
~
2 diam(B)
[2n/(n+l)]k/2j{k
(the strongest known inequality
which follows from Jung' s 1Iheorem
(FHl 2.10.41] · whi ch states than an arbitrary bounded subset B of
Rn
is contained within a unique closed ball of s mallest diameter no larger than
[2n/(n+l)j1/2 diam(B).
the definitions.
The left hand inequality follows from
The middle inequality i s a consequence of the observation
- 83 -
F . J . Almgren Jr .
r (.k ( pB(O , l ) ) t j ( pE. G(n,k)
) lit
dO' k P n,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - = --------~--
(\PE. S
,Lk(pQ)t
G(n,k) DEFINITION.
only if J(k(B)..( s u bman i f o l d
~1
~
~
n
,
A Borel s et B
in
Rn is called Qtk, k) rectifiable if and
€ >
and fo r e ach
n
(. of cla s s 1 of R
me asures j(k,
~ ~ which ~
el.(k)Ct •
dt kP)l/t
° there exists a k dimensional
such that
Jek([A - MEl V [ Mf, - A]) -<
(7)
=
.J k , J~, Q~" ~
0(k, k) rectifiable.
i mmediate consequence of
e•
( 5),
gk
~~.2£ subsets.2.!
This fact i s essentially an
(6), and the definition above.
- 84 -
F. J. Almgren Jr. F.4._ Computation of the measures .1<.1, ,81, ~~, J~, and
fj-
on ~
[Fit1 3.3.19J. With each closed 2 D ~ B(z,r) C R = C one a s s oci a t e s the family Fn(D)
~ dimensional set A of Cantor type
ci~cular disk
cons i sting of the n disks B(z + r(l - 1/n)exp«k/n)2~~), r/n) corresponding to k
=
1, 2, ••• , n.
Inductively one then constructs
of closed circular disks by the formulas G = F 4 4(B(O,l) Gn =UtFn(D): De Gn_lJ
n- UG
for n
5, 6, 7, ....
Finally one defines the Cantor type set A =
(see figure 15)
n
n=4
and seeks to estimate the measures j{l,.Jl."
~~)~~
and
9 on A.
\'1e
have the following immediate estimates: (1)
the smallest distance between the centers of distinct disks of
F (B(z,r») is n
(2)
2(1 - l/n)sin(~/n)r.
no halfplane bounded by a straight line through the center of
B(z,r) meets more th ~n n/2 + 1 members of Fn(B(z,r». (3)
for n ~ 4, Gn
consists of
f (4) (1
n:/3l
disks each with radius
n = 3l/nl
the minimum distance between distinct members of Gn equals (from
»,
2(1 - l/n) sin('\1'/n)r - 2Jn
2(1 - l/n)sin('lI'/n)(nfn) - 2Jn 2Jn (n - 1)sin(1'l/n) - I]
> 2fn[(n - 1)2/n - IJ (because
sin(x»2x/1Y
for
0 ~ x
~Jn'
- 85 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
~
Estimate E.!l 1t leA)
,leA).
One notes that
~ leA) ~ .sl(A) ~ 2 because
for n = 4, 5, 6, 1 We seek to show that ~ 1 (A) ~ 1l' .
Es~ma te E.!l ~i(A).
o
!n
.<. 1..<. 'lr
an d choose
~ d
implies
(i)
n ~
(ii) (iii) To show
~
> 0
such that whenever
Let
n ~ 4 the condition
5,
(n-l)sin(lf/n)'7 'A , (n-l)sin(1rIn) - 1 > " [1/2 - l/(n ..l») •
~i(A) ~
'II'
it will be sufficient to show that in ca s e H is a
countable covering of A consisting of convex open sets S with
diam(S) ~
b,
then
where
S(S)
S
~l(pQ)
pEG(2.1) Q = R2n[(x,y):
In c.se
S
O~ %~ 1, Y
= B(z,r)
=
di2,lP
oj.
2 for some z € R
and some
0 <: r":oo,
then~l(pS) = 2r for e uch p € G(2,1) and, since ~2,1(G(2,1» = 1, one has
S
p€G(2,1)
t\pS) d)'2 IP ,
We define (): G(2,1)--(-1Y/2, 1' 2]
= 2r .
by th e requirement that for each
- 86 -
F. J. Almgr-en Jr.
peG(2,1),
is the acute angle between the x axis
2
and peR ).
12 , 1 =
One notes also that
(1/"')
trf2
S.
-i/2
(lfrr) de so that cosB
de
= 2/'lr
In particular t hen, in case S .. B( z ,r), ~(S) = '!1' r. Suppose H ·i s a countable covering of A by convex open s e t s each wi th di ameter no l arger t han J • H i s finite.
Since A is compact one can assume
Also, s in ce A is compact,
E
inf ae A
s o that, choosing each member of
v
sup
S€ H
t d:i:s t( a ,
2 R - H)} > 0
su f f i cien t l y l arge tha t
2 j ~ <.
is contained in so me member of H.
G~
that each member of H cOnt ains some member of Gv i n order to estima te
~n over R2 for n
e; , one has t hat
k(S ) fo r S €
4, 5, 6 , •••
=
~ n (T) =
Also one can a ssume
•
H it is us eful to def ine mea sures
by t he formula
J n card( Gn n 1 BIB
1\
T ;, ¢1)
2 is a measure since it i s de f ine d over al l subs e ts of R and 2 R (T) ~ ~ F ~ (v) when ever Fe 2 ,F i s 'coun t ubLe , an d Tc U F).
(~n
\fn
Since
ca rd G n_l
= ~
/ _ 1-
= ( I,n / I0. l ) card n_
card Gn
1\
\ II 'f n - l
~
Gn , one has
If
-n
We now consider sever al pos s i bi lit i e s. ~
1.
S E H and S
t( S) ~ !( D)
=
'l(
~.!
f~ =
s ingle
11' 't'y( S )
~
» ?
Then
D of G".
Des an d
"Ii Y+1 t s i
as was compu te d a bove . Case 2.
S€
H.2Ei S meets a t l ea st
s mallest in teger su ch t hat
4 ~ n ~ V
~
members of
C\I .
Let n be the
and S m ~e ts a t l eas t two members
- 87 -
F. J. Al m gr en Jr. of G. (a)
,
In particular,
Jn
(since diam S ~ S
= ~
me mbe r s of Gn is l arger t han In 0 )
. (b)
,
5 (by the choice of [, above),
n ~
(c)
an d the distance between distinct
S meets a single membe r
D = B(z,fn_l)
of B n_l
(by the choice
of n }, We now define the normal retraction f:
R2~E
f(x) = x f (x )
=
for x
E
-In)
E,
z + (;n -l - f n )( x-z)/Ix-zl
and ·we also define B () S
= B(z, In-l
I¢ ,
for x €
2 R - E;
c (B) to be the center of B for BE G and, in ca se n,
one choose s
1; ( B) E f-l (B) n boundary (S), f [ S ( B)]
=
c(B)
in ca se
c (B)e- S
(see figure 16 ) .
li e now verify
for e a ch BE G n•
We c on sider two pos s i bil i ties :
Po s s ibil ity 1.
c(B ) E. S, f[~(B)1 = c (B).
....f\ 'V n+l(B n s)
Then
~ 1lj1 (B)
n
/)..In <: (n-l)sin('lt/n)!n
=(n-l ) sin('lt/n )fn_/n ( s in ce I n-l
= npn
and
fLt(B)1
-
If[s( B)]
- c(B) \
= c (B)) (1 - 1/n)s in(1I'/ n)Pn _l -\f[s(B)1 - c(B)\
wh ich is the de s i r e d ineq ua li ty . P os sibility 2.
c ( B)
if S.
I f t h i s pos s i bi li t y oc curs
B (1 S is
- 88 -
F. J:. Almgren Jr. con tained in a half plane bounded by a . fltraigb
+ l/(nt-l)]Jn
<: ((n-l)sin('ll'/n) - iJjn
b above
(by the choice of
so that condition (iii) holds)
(n-l)sin(1r/n )J n -
If[S(B)1 - c(B) 1•
Since boundary(S) is a simple closed curve the members of G which meet S n can be a r range d sequentially Bl, B2, ••• , Bm = BO so that the corresponding poin ts ~(Bl )' ••• ,S(Bm) occur in a natural order along One recalls the gene r a l f act that
boundary(S).
2 ~( S) = ~l(boundary( S» ( immedi a t e l y obvious in ca se boun dary(S) is polygonal, which suffices here}, s o t hat 2 ~( S) = ~hboundary(S}) m
~ EI~(B.) - s(B. 1)\ j=l J J-
(since
Li p(f) = 1)
~ j~ Ic(B ,) =l J
- c(B , l} \ - \fU(B ,)] - C(B ,)\ - If[;(BJ'_l)] - C(BJ'_l)\ J J J-
m
~ 2 2: [(1 - l/n}sin('l!"/n}f -1 - \f[s(B.)] - c(B ,} \ j=l
(by the estimate f a ct t hnt
n
(1)
=
2
m
Z
J
"1
above on the distance between centers and the
Bm = BO) ~ 2
J
~
j=l not-
1 (B , 1\ S )
'>,4'not- l(S)
(from the de f i n i t i ons ) .?, 2? '¥Yot-l (S).
J
- 89 -
F. J. Almgren Jr. Hence ~ 5(8)
8€. H .
=
1IIf1V.+l (A.)
= ? ~ard(G~+l)
(since
= I/f v+ l
d11(
>
as observed in estimate (3) above).
It foll~s that (){.l A) = 'tt' •
•
y
Computation
~ j{l(A), ,gl(A), ~ ~~(A). One notes that for convex
2, sets 8 C R
(
.
SIt l.. (p8)
pe: G(2,1)
dX2 It
is nondecreasing in t for 1 ~ t ~ since for
1 ~ s
,
) lit .
00
(this follows from Holder's inequality
,
is nonde cnee s Ing in t for
1 ~ t ~"".
But it has been shown that
Hence one concludes 2
In particular J<.l(A) = 2, ai(A) j{l(AI1 B) = 2fn
and
forl
=1r'.
One concludes also for n
~i(A
flB) = 1rfn
~ 4 that
- 90 -
F. J. Almgren Jr . whenever
B€
G n
a partition of A.
1A
Ilfn
since the
sets
A (l B
are congruent and constitute
Now
() B: B
e
41
for some n ~
G
n
is a basis for the relative topology of A.
(j(lL A)j2
(~L A)!-rr.
=
l
(M
It follows that A contains no
Hence
, 1) rectifiable subset of positive
measure. n A Eorel set C in R is called purely (j(k, k ) unrectifiable
DEFINITION.
if and only if C contains no Borel set B which is with J{k(B)
>
~l(A)
Computation of
J;(A). Uan --4S 1
"1n(X)
tha t j(
X€
0a , x e; n
~k, k) unrectifiable.
and
'11 : l n
1
k) rectifiable
O.
In particular, then, A is purely
whenever
~k,
B(z,
=
First one defines for n
(x-z)/lx-zl
Jn-1)
€" Gn-1
(see figure 17).
We as se rt
almos t all points a of A have the property tha t .
d
.
~~.!!!
for ~ integer
Y
?;
5.
Sl
To prove this it is sufficient to show for
each closed proper subarc J of Sl,
Jt l(A To see this we set K
for each n> \I.
and
~ 5,
n
(\
[)v la: '1n(a) f
KjI = G~
U
DE K
Since
J})
and
F (D)n tB: n-l
O.
n
"1
n
(B)
n
(Sl - J)
I ¢}
- 91 '-
F. J. Almgren Jr.
for 11 > Il , one finds that the set
An (\
~al~n(a)¢ J}C
n;>11
n
n'?~
(AnUKn )
~ 1 measure O.
ha s
DEFINITION.
For a ERn, 0..( r ~oo , V €
lsi
X(a,r,V,s) = Rnn
G(n, n-k), 0
.<
B..(
1, •
s-ldist(x-a, V)..( lx-al..( r}
(see figure 18). We a sse r t t hat
.f2.!:M l
almost all points a of A,
Gfl(.1(} LAn X(a,lXl,v, s)a1 ,
whenever
V E 0(2,1)
0..(
~
~
lim sup (2t)-1-'<.1 (Afl X(a,t,V,s»
=
t_O+
B
<. 1.
1/(2n)
It suffice s to show that for every
sufficiently large integer n there exi s t s a positive number
t..( 2/ n_l
s u ch that l[A ( 2t)-Jt f\ X(a,t, {XI u"ln(a) = 1/( 2~).
i s not much smaller t han
01,
sn
To do this we define
S(z,r,u,~) = B( z,r)f\ tXI (x-z). u ~ r ;co s ( ~ >1 whenever
n, z € R r > 0, u E Sl, 0
~ t ~
'tr (see f igure 19) and observe
t hat
( 2fn_l)-1~1(A n S ( z'Jn_l'u,~» is close to As s ume
o
~/'Ir
B(z'fn_~) E 0n_l and n i s l arge.
in ca se
aE: A, a E B(zdn_l) E 0n_1' V= tal x."ln(a) = OJ,
11'/2, sin("") = s , 0
-
11'" , cos(t)
=
1 - 2/n , and observe
S( z'fn_l'1 n( a)exp (J: ),0() - S( z'!n_l''?n(a)'f)C X(a, 2/n_l'" (see figure 20).
One notes that if n is l arge, t hen (4fn_ls)-lXl[A () X(a, 2jn_lS, V, s)
is not much smaller than
0(/( 21's)
=
1/2 fr •
f
V, s)
is 'Small and
- 92 -
F . J .. Almgren Jr. DEFINITION. of all pairs
We denote by 8* the subset of
(a,V)
~ >~,
suoh that for all
~l(A() X(a,r,V,s»
sup
lim sup s_O+
rs
O..c.r<~
AX G(2,1) oonsisting
= 00 •
In view of the estimate above, ,1{l(A_
n
THEOREM [FHl 3.3.91.
a c s",
\al(a,V)~SJ)
O.
Let A' C Rn,b(k(A')-<
00
V€ B(2,1)
e:
p
,
G(n,k),
~
whenever
r
k
s
k
~ ~ > O. ~ J..k(pB)
x E: B
PROOF.
j{~AI () X(x,r, ker(p), s)]
'>up 0<: r
lim su~ s_O
=
~
= O.
One notes that X(p,r, ker( p), s)C p -lu(p(x), rs)
whenever
r,s
> 0; and therefore
P#~kLAI)U(p(X), rs)
lim sup
(r,s)~(O,O)
whenever
x
e:
=
00
(rs)k
We define the Radon measure )A over Rk
B.
by the formula
)'4-(8) = infh#GKkLAI)(T)1 SC T, T is a Borel setJ for eaoh
k• 8 C R
In particular lim sup
J -'> 0+
whenever
z E: p(B) .
One takes
B
that for every
p
tlk(B(z,.l') )
The theory of derivat ion of measures implies clk(pB)
= tal EO:
)4(B(z,y»
(a, ker(p»
G(2,1),
EO:
8*~
O.
in the above theorem and concfudes
- 93 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
J.l(pA) ~ ll(pB) + .r.1(p(A--B»
~ 0 + .1(l(p(A_B»
~ Lip(p) ~hA-B) =
I t follows that
gl(A) = 0
o. and
J~(A)
0
for e ach
1
~ t ~
00 •
- 94 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
F.5.
The structure of sets of finite ;H=a::=u:;:s::=d=o=r=ff;: measure.
As indicated
in F.l, there evolved from the stuqy of the behavior on sets of Cantor type (like the set A of F.4) of the various k dimensional measures over ~, first a pattern of structure for general sets of finite k dimensional
measure and, second, the general acceptance of Hausdorff measure J(k and integral-geometric measure n
measure~ in R •
J~
In this section
as the two most important k dimensional we summarize the principal structure
resul ts. DEFINITION.
A Borel set
and only if J{k(B) -c submanifold
Me
]I in
~
and for each
00
.e >-
~
l!
k) rectifiable
if
0 there exists a k damenaLonaj,
n of class I of R such that
J.{k([A - Mg lLJ rMf. - AJ) < THEOREM.
~k,
is called
A,
]I
e,
C Rn ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ (j{k, k) rectifiable,
AVB, Allll, A - B
~~
sets which
~ (Ji<,
k) rectifiable.
n If M is a k dimensional submanifold of R of class 1, then
PROOF.
locally in M, j{k L M is a Radon measure, open subsets of M can be j(k L M approximated from the inside by compact sets, and arbitrary subsets can be ~kL M approximated from the outside by open sets, etc. DEFINITION.
n A Borel set C in R is called
~ (Mk, k) unrectifiable
if and only if C contains no Borel set B which is k wi th X ( B)
> O.
THEOREM.
If A
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Rn ~ j{k(A)'<;
Jek ~ unique ~ sets B, C B
1! (~k,
k
(M , k) rectifiable
k) rectifiable
PROOF.
E.!.
n R ~ ~
~ C ~purely
Maximize b{ k L A
over
A
00
,
~ there exist
= BUC,
Bf\C =
¢,
(~k, k) unrectifiable.
(~k, k) rect ifiable Borel subsets
- -95
~
F . J. Almgren Jr. The cen1iI'al f act related to t ile structure of purely <Jlk,k) unrectifiable sets is the following. THEOREM [FHl
~ C c If be ~ ~ ~ ~ ~k(C)':'
3.3.13'1.
.m d suppose C is purely
~k, k) unrectifiable.
~ for ~n,k ~ all
pEG(n,k), J..k(pC)
~ particular, J~(A)
= 0
for 1
=
O.
~ t ~
The example of F. 4 shows tha t
00 •
&.~( C)
need not be O.
The proof of the above theorem rests in substantial measure on a detailed analysis of the sets C n X(a,r,V,s) (recall the density estimates of such sets in F.4).
Certain properties
of these sets imply rectifiability; for example,
THI~OREM [FHl 3.3.5 J. diam(E) .:: r, p €
e: E.
&:lli
G(n,k), ~ E
whenever a
n Suppose r ::> 0, 0 <: s « 1, E C R
~
Let
X(a, r, ker(p), s) = q
q6
ker(p) E G(n, rr-k}, 1
~
~ ~ a e E,
(1)
card(p-l(p(a)))
(2)
f = p(E) X q(E) (\lJp(a), q(a)): aE E5
~ Lipschitzian
&:!:h
Lipschitz constant at ~ lis,
(3)
In
~ E is ~ ~ set, then E i s ~\ k ) rectifiable.
n In summary then, any subset of R of finite j{k measure is
~k almost
uni~uely the disjoint union of an (~k, k) rectifi able subset of Rn n• together with a purely ~k, k) unrectifiable s u bs e t of R e ach purely
Furthermore,
(~, k ) unrectif iable s u bse t of Rn pro jects to £.k mea sure
under a l mos t all orthogonal projection s
k• n R _'> R
0
- 96 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
REFERENCES [AW]
W.K. Allard,
On the first variation of a varifold,
Ann. of Math.,
(1972).
[AF1] F.J. Almgren, Jr., Existence and regularity almost everywhere of solutions to elliptic variational problems with constraints [AF2] '
(in preparation).
, The theory of varifolds. calculus in the large for the integrand
A variational
k dimensional area
(multilithed notes), Princeton, 1964.
[BDG] E. Bombieri, E. De Giorgi, and E. Giusti, Minimal cones and the Bernstein problem, Invent. Math 7 (1969), 243-268. [BJ]
J.E. Brothers, Integral geometry in homogeneous spaces, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 124 (1966), 480-517.
[DJ]
J. Douglas, Soiution of the problem of Plateau, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 33 (1931), 263-321.
[FHl] H. Federer, Geometric Measure Theory, Die Grundlehren dar mathematischen Wissenschaften in Einzeldarstellungen, Band 153, Springer-Verlag Berlin - Heidelberg - New York, 1969. [FH2]
, The
sin~lar
sets of area minimizing
rectifiable currents with codimension one and of 'area minimizing flat chains modulo two with arbitrary codimension, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 79 (1960), 761-771. [FH3] ________, Currents and area, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 98 (1961), 204-233.
- 97 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
[FW] W.H. Fleming, An example in the problem vf ·least area, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 7 (1 956),
1065-l074~
[GM] E. Giusti and M. Miranda, Sulla reeolarita delle
soluzion~
.deboli di una classe a{ sistemi ellittici guasi-lineari, Arch. Rat. Mech. Anal. 31 (1968/69), 173-184. [GJl] Jean Guckenheimer, Singularities in "soap bubbles" ant: "soap films", I.C.T.P. lecture notes, 1972 •. [GJ2]
, Regularity of the singular sets of 2 dimensional area minimizing flat chains modulo 3 in B3 , Ph.D. Thesis, Princeton University, 1973.
[MC1] C.B. Mor r ey , Jr.
Mult i pl e integrals in the Calculus of
Variations, Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschafte~
in Einzeldarstellungen, Band 130, Springer-Verlag
Berlin - Heidelberg - New York, 1966. [MC2]
, Partial regularlty results for
non-lineD ~
elliptic systems, J. Math, Mech. 17 (1968), 649-670. CPS] B.S. Palais and S. Smale, A generalized Morse theory, Bull. Amer. Math. Soq •. 70 (1964), 165-172. [RE]
E.R. Reifenberg, Solution of the Plateau problem for m-dimensional surfaces of varying topological type (with Appendix by J.F. Adams), Acta Math 104 (1960) 1-92.
[TR]
B. Thorn, Quelques propri etes globales des varietes different iables, Comment. r,iat h .Hel v . 28 (1954), 17-86.
- 98 -
F . J. Almgren Jr.
(f)
CD LO
o
«
- 99 -
F. J . Almgren Jr.
!
.s: N Q)
L
:J
OJ
h-
-a
~
...-:>
a
-rJ
OJ
C
(1)
c
.-r:> -
:J
'+-
U OJ
4-
-u0
U
.x: e
If)
(1)
0-
E if)
«
c
0
>
L
~
u
0 co
-0
c
:J 0
-0
Figure 3 '%j
;-. ~
S (JQ '1
III
::s c... ~
The. oriented surface S having boundary C
and of least area has inf i nit.e topo\oSic.al type.
t-
o
0
- 101 -
Jr, F. J. Almgren .
U) (])
-
-0
-r (1)
L ~ {JJ
u.,
C
«r
.c
2 <0
E
+.:>
C '-
0
o.,
0 CO
-0
...0 c (l)
c
~
~
0
.-0
c
eo
.c
-rJ
C+-
~
.-
3
f-
.x: if)
.-
-U
«
0
OJ
c
a-:> L (1)
>
c 0
u
- ,10 2 -
F. J. Almgren Jr .
Fig u re
5
o
The
I dimensional
set
Y
connecting the 3 points of the
boundary B and of least l e nqt. h has an interior singularitj of codimens ion
I.
- 103 -
F ,. J. Almgren Jr.
Figure 6
The uni9ue minimal par t.i t.ioni nc
confkguration for two regions
of presc.ri bed vol umes.
v
- 104 -
F, J, Almgren Jr',
A "s oe p bubble lIke)) minimal
part i t ion i n 9 con f \' 9u ro t ion consisting of six real enc\ytic 0 surfaces meeting at 120 a lon g four smooth arcs' wh ic h meet at e.9 ua \. a \'"\g les at two poi nts .
- 105 -
F .. J . Almgren " r.
ro
(1)
s,
ea
~
(f) (CJ
(1)
'-i0 (l)
U
<0
ro Q)
L
::>
en
u,
'+s;
::>
<.f)
<0 ([)
CO
-0
s:: (G
..D tf)
J
-D
:0
~ (1)
.s:
l-
- 106 -
F. J . Almgren Jr.
y•
_ 107 -
F . J . Almgren Jr .
o
~
o
-
- ,108 -
F. J . Almgren Jr.
Fi 9ure\ \ a
Fi 9u re 11 b
A soap fi I m w'lth a boundary w'lre which is not clo se d .
- 109 -
F. J. Almgren :J r .
N
I
0
(\j (j)
G Q)
4-
O
S~
-P
OJ
0
c
LL
(/)
.-
..c -r-:>
(J)
c
Q)
-r:> U) CD
(1)
40
C o >L
--.
a
I
-l
u
ill
-C
l-
- 110 -
F. J. Almgren Jr .
Fi 9ure 13 a
I
+
-0-
+
o,
+
+
I
+
0I
Y=/G .
1.
J
+
rigure 13 b
- 111 -
F . J . Almgren Jr.
- 11 2 -
F . J . Alm gren Jr .
<:(
+><1J
cJ)
0-
::>->
~
L
0
-r=>
C ·
(C1
U
-
CO
s:: 0
(j)
C
(J)
E -0 (])
ill L
~
OJ
u,
C 0 (l)
-C
l-
:.. 113 -
F. J. Almgren Jr.
Figure \6
f
-.
Polygona \ estimates on boundary (5)
- 114 -
F. J . Almgren Jr.
f\9 ure \7 The. maps
~n'
F . J . .l\ltngr en Jr.
_ 116 -
F . J . Almgren Jr .
\u \
,,
----r
- 117 _
. .. . . : '.: : ::'
S( Z ,jn-I ,
F. J . Almgren Jr.
~~ (a)eXp(kad,cx.)_ 5(Z,/n_1 , "l~(a),(3) C
X(a, 2.fn_1 s, V, s)
Figure 20
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE MATEMATICO ESTIVO (C.LM.E.)
E.
GIUSTI
MINIMAL SURFACES WITH OBSTACLES
Corso
tenuto
a
Varenna
dal
24
agosto
al
2
settembre
1972
Ei. Giusti
Introduction We will be concerned with the problem of existence and regularity of solutions to the non-parametric Let
Pla~eau
problem -with obstacles.
0 be an open bounded set in in, and let - A be a closed set
contained in the c19sure of
0,
o.
Let
~(x)
be a function defined in
00 , and let w(x) be a function in 0 such tliat
~(x) ~~(x)
in
Roughly speaking, our problem consists of finding a function defined in
00 n A u(x~ r
0, such that:
= ~(x)
on
00,
a)
u(x)
b)
u(x) ~ w(x)
c)
the "surface" graph of u
in A, minimizes the area between all graphs of
fUnctions verifying (a) and (b). We shall refer to this problem as Problem Depending on the choice of the set
[~,A, w]
•
A, we have different situations;
we shall consider in detail the -following three cases: 1) ~ obstacles,where
A coincides with
n.
This is the simplest
situation, and the results are quite satisfactory, at least from the point of view of the existence and regularity of the solution. 2)
Discontinuous obstacles. and
oA
no
Here
A is the closure of its interior,
is a -non-void regular surface of dimension
n-l •
3) 1h1!!. obstacles, when A is a regular (n-l) -dimensional oriented surface in
n.
We note that, in the previous classification, no mention has been made ~
boundary data
and of the obstacle
~
and
V;
of the fUnctions
of course, depending on the regularity of the
W, we have various subcases.
On the
other hand, one of the f ea tures of the problem under consideration is that
- 122-
E. Giusti the regularity of the solut ion op.uends more on t he shape of the s et on the smoothness of the
functions , ~
and
W,
A t han
so that we can consider onl y
the ca se of regular data and yet obtain a complete picture of the situation. For instance, we can su ppose t ha t the bou ndary of and that
~
i
Q
~f
2 C , while
class
Problem
In this way, although not comnletely.
W
0,
dO, is a C'-surface
is Lipschitz-continuous. become R more precisely stated,
[~,A, wl
In f act, we must make precise the class of func-
tions competing 'for the minimum, and poss ibly we ha ve to extend in a suitable way the area functional in order to cover the class under ' consideration'. The following well-known example shows t hat in general one can not hope to get a continuous solut i on. Let r a dius
1/2
n be the unit disc in Let
tion ' of the pr obl em
~
=0
and
( ~,A, wl
2
E
, a nd let
W=M
A be the closed dis c of
I t is cl ea r that a co nti nuou s so lu-
must be e qua l to M in the interi or disc , an d
must be a solut i on ·of t he minimal su rface e quat ion in the annulu s , t ak i ng the values zer o on the ext erior cir cle and
M in t he int eri or .
Qn the other
hand, if, M is big enough , such a s olution cannot exist , a nd he nc e t he origina l problem has no continuous solutions, in spit e of the r e gularity of t he data. It is evident from the preceding example that one must c onsi der discontinuous functions dealing with discontinuous a nd thin obstacles. We will work in t he clas s of upper
semi~continuous
f unct i ons, a nd we
shall prove t he existence of a so lution to the problem a f te r ext endi ng t he area funct ional t o thos e funct ions. Let us remar k, however, that the class of fUnct i ons co m p e tin g to minimize t he a r ea is by no means uniquely determined, a nd t hat our approach to the problem in consideration is only one of the poss ible opt ions, t he
- 123--
E. Giusti choice between them being justified both and
~
~~steriori
by the results obtained
priori by the aAsthetical feelings of the author. The paper is divided into :roqr chapters:
1.
Smooth obstacles
2.
Discontinuous and thin obstacles; existence theory
3.
Regularity of the solution; the favorable case
4.
Regularity of the solution; the general case.
At the end of every chapter, a sectiOn is dedicated to a discussion of additional results and open problems. Although
That section also contains the references.
effort has been made to report all the material relevant to the
subject, some unintentional omissions are ineVitable, and the author can only lpologize.
1.
Smooth obstacles Let
tion in that
n be a bounded open set with C3-bbundary, let ~(x) be a C2-func-
on,
and let
~(x) ~ *(x)
in
*(x)
be a Lipschitz-continuous function in
n
such
'on .
In this chapt er , we shall prove the following theorem: Theorem 1.1. problem .QJ.l..§
lAo
Let
[~,n,*]
on
be ~ surface of 1lQn.-negative .!!!illm curvature.
Then ~
has!!. unique solution in the ~ of l!ll L1pschitz-continu -
functions. For Lipschitz-continuqus functions, the area of the graph is given by
a(v) It is not difficult to show that
=
Jn /l+ IDv 1 2
dx •
- 124 · -
E. Giusti n
Lg 2 < 1
(1.1)
.i
• i=O
For ·that, we first observe that
J(v 'di v g+g )dx J(-g.Dv+g0)dx .$. a(v)
•
=
nOn
we have
J
(-"7.Dv+1 )dx
n C~
Now tions
l is dense in L
-.gy,
g
o,y
j
J(v div g +g
o and
= a(v)
•
it follows that there exists a sequence of C=-func-
n 2 .E gi i=O Y
, with
0
YOY
<
-
converging to
1
=
)dx
J
(-g 'Dv+g
0
Y
OY
"7,
1
L
in
0
o
1
, so that
)dx -. a(v)
(1.1) fol lows at once . From (r.r), we conclude that
a(v)
respect to the uniform convergence.
is lower semi-continuous with
In fact, if v
n
is a sequence of
Lipschitz-continuous functions, uniformly convergent to a Lipschitz-continuous ·funct i on
v, we have, for every choice of the functions
J(v div g+g )dx
o
0
=
8
i:
~= 0
J(v
n
div g+8 )dx.$. lim inf G,(v )
>
0 ,
the class
lim
Let us consider now, for
R
~=
0
(v €'Lip (0)
v
= cp
on
where
=
sup I v(x)-v~Y)1 \x-y x, yEO
xh
is the Lipschitz constant of the function
v .
00
v~ 1jr
n
in
0)
- 125 -
E. Giusti For R~R o' let
un
R In
greater than some
L cP, 1jr) R(
R the class o'
Ls ' non-void.
L (cp, 1jr ) , there exists a unique minimum for R
be a minimizing sequence.
a(v) .
Let
In fact,
Then the Ascoli-Arzel1l. theorem provides u
a(v)
provides the required mini-
is lower semi-continuous, the function
u
R
R
in
L (CP, 1jr) • R
a . subsequence uniformly. convergent to a function
Since
mum. The uniqueness follows at once fran the strict convexity of the functional.
ia. u
R
IUR h .$
We obviously have
R.
It is worth noting that, i f
IU R h < R
gives the minimum in the class of all Lipschitz-continuous functions.
fact, let
v(x)
be an arbitrary function in
enough, the function
~
+ t(v-u
R)
L (cp, 1jr ) - . S
belongs to
If'
It
I
is small
L (CP, 1jr ) , and hence the R
function
has a local minimum at
t
= O.
Since
g(t)
is an absolute minimum. In particular, we have
is convex, this local minimum g(O).$ g( l )
that is,
The proof of Theorem 1.1 is then reduced to the proof of an 1! m:iQtl bound for the Lipschitz constant of lC.
u
R•
A supersolution (resp., a subsolution) for the area functional is a
Lipschitz-continuous function
w(x)
such that
a(w) .$ a(v)
,
In
- 126 -
E . Giusti We have the following ~
1.1.
Let
ul;'l
LR(cp,ljf),andill, w(x) 2:..ljf(x) Proof.
in
'01
'0.
~
the minimizing function for the
~.!!.supersolution~
Suppose ~
Suppose first that
w(x)
w(x)2:.cp(x)
Iwll.:s R .
> cp(x)
in
~
in
~~
J:!l. On
Th'en 'w( x ) 2:. uR(x)
en .
~
J:!l. o
We have
and
so that, if
is non -void, we have
and hence
But
thi~
area in
is impossible, because
u
R
is the only function minimizing the
LR(cp,ljf)
Then
A
=0 ,
and the lemma is proved in the case
w(x)
> cp(x)
general case follows at once, considering the supersolution -w( x ) +€ , and letting
E -+
0 •
q.e.d .
A similar argument proves the following two lemmas:
The E
>0 ,
- 127 -
E. Giusti 1.2.
~
~ let
that
Let
vex)
u
L
R(CP2''il2) O. Then
Then
u~l)
Let
vex) S uR(x)
u~2)
and
, respectively. u(l) < u(2)
in
Lemma 1.4.
Let
Then
(1.2)
max
.ill do. Suppose
minimize the
~
CPl S CP2
in
LR(CP1''il
do
in
and
0
l)
and
'ill S'il2
in
hav~:
u~l)
LR(CP2''il2)
vex) S cp(x)
.ill 0'.
Suppose that
--R-R- ·
Finally, we
L cP, 'iI) , R(
be the minimi,zing ftrhction -f or the -~ in
be.~ subsolution such ~
Ivl l SR.
~ 1.3:
R
and
IU~1)_U~2)\
u~2)
minimize the
Smax
(na;
Proof.
Let us denote by
u~2)+M
minimizes the area in the class
~
\CP1-q>2 1,
in
m::.x o
LR(CP1''il
l)
and
\'ill-'il2 11
M the right-hand side of (1.2).
The function
LR(CP2+M, 'il2 +M) , and hence, by
Lemma 1.3, we have in Changing the role of
rn. and
Theorem 1.2. ~
Let
u(l) R w(x)
and
u(2) we get (1.2). R'
and
vex)
0
q.e.d.
~ respectively. ~ supersolution
subsolution for the area functional such that w(x)
= vex) = cp(x)
and
w(:x;) 2:. 'iI(x)
in
o.
- 128 -
E . Giusti Let
11.
R>
LR(cp,'lr) •
Proof.
, ~ let
uR(X)
min1Inize the ~ in
Then
We must estimate
point
\tl l )
= max (Iwh, lvii,
y . belongs to
.
\uR(x) -uR(y)
I.
Let us suppose first that the
Lemmas 1.1 and 1.2 give at once the inequality
0;)
and hence
(1.3) Now suppose that neither of the points T = y-x.
and, if
x, y
belongs to
0;), and let
Let
f(x)
is a function in
be the function in
n, let
n( T)
defined by
It is clear that the functions set
n
n neT»~
in the class
uR(X) ,
~(uR''lr)
U~T)(X) and
minimize the area (in the
LR(u~T),
Fran Lemma 1.4, it follows that there exist points z"
in n
n neT)
z'
'lr(T» in
, respectively . o(n
n neT»~
and
such that
On the other hand, either
z'
or
Z'-T
belongs to
and (1 .4) we get the conclusion of t he theorem.
0;), and hence fran (1.3)
q .e.d.
- 129 -
E. Giusti Theorem 1.2 gives the required constant of u
~
priori bound for the Lipschitz
R ' provided one can construct a supersolution and a subsolu-
tion satisfying the hypotheses.
The remaining part of this chapter will be
devoted to such construction. lEo
For
t > 0 , let at
(x
€
a
d(x) < t)
rt
- (x
€
a
d(x) = t) ,
d(x) = dist (x,On)
where
C3
If the boundary of a, On , is of class
, then the following'
results are not difficult to prove : ali
There exists an
Eo > 0
exists a unique
y
The function
d(x)
in
such that, for every x On such that 2
is , of class
in
~o'
there
Ix-yl
d(x)
C
in ~o and
( )
n-L
\grad d(x)
I
=1 .
We have n-L
i Y " -~(x) = "~ l-kk (y)d(x) ~ ~ ki(y) , i=l i i=l
where
y
is the point corresponding to
(i = 1, .•• ,n-l) IF.
~,
in
On, and
ki(y)
are the principal curvatures of 00 at
An upper barrier (relative tp
in some
x
C\'
and
1/1)
> -
1 +
is a function
y. J.L(x) , defined
0 < E < 'Eo' such that
J.L ~ 1/1
in ~ '
J.L
max i~1 + max 11/11 <Xl
a
- 130 -
E. Giusti
(Here and in the following, we sum over repeated indices .) In an analuguUs way, we define a lower barrier as a function
A(X)
defined in 0e ' such that
A = cP
on
00
j
A
S -l~; Icp I on f e '
e.( A) 2: 0
We note
tha~
e.(A)
in ~ •
is, except for a positive factor, the Euler operator
relative to the area functional.
00 , and i l l t
~.!!.
,t he ~ curvature.Q!
Lipschitz-continuous function in O .
Suppose that
00 k llQn.-negative. Then there llill upper and lower
barriers.
E!:Q2!. We shall construct only an upper barrier . The lower barrier can be found by means of the same argument. First, we extend cp will be denoted again by
2 to a C - fu nct i on defined in 0
cp .
f(s)
2
is a C -function in f( 0)
(l.~)
1f'(s)
=0
this function
We will consider a barrier of the form
~(x)
where
j
= cp(x)
+ f(d(x)) ,
(O,e] such that
f(e) 2: 1 + 2 max Icpl +
o
2: 1 + ICP~l +
Itl l
=~
m::.x It I = ~ o
f "(s)
< 0 in (O,e]
- 13 1 -
E. G iusti
In this way , condit ions ( ~l) and (~2) a r e sa t isfi ed. .i nst a nce , that Let
y
~(x )
2:.
Let us prove, for
>jr ( x )
be 't he point on
00
su ch t ha t
d(x)
=
\x-y I
.
We have
a nd hen ce
On t he ot her hand,
so t hat
~( x ) ~
>jr ( x ) •
Finally, we have
d d + 2~cp d 1 + + f ,2 (i4J-(jl xix j xi x j xi xi + f ' ( 2.6::p cp d -2cp cp d ;(1+ Icp 12)~ _d cp cp ) xi xi xix j xi x j x xix j xi x j Since
00
ha s non- negative mean curvature , we hav e from (a ) tha t
3
~
is
non -pos itive, and therefore
where
c
2
depends on the C -norms of cp
l
and
d .
I f we t ake f(s) with A
~
c
l
' we ha ve
e(~ )
1 =A log
(Bs+ l)
SO, and we must only verify (1 . 5 ) .
Thi s i s
- 132 -
E. Giusti
done easily if we choose A
= oC l
and
lG.
An upper barrier is actually a supersolution in 0e: ; in fact, let
~(x)
be a Lipschitz-continuous function with support in
~
, and consider
the function
We have 0:' ( 0)
If
~ ~
0 , we have
the function
il.
0:'(0) ~ 0 , and, - taking into accou} the convexity of
o:(t) , we get 0:(0)
so that
~(x)
.s 0:(1)
is a supersolution in 0e: •
If we put mi n
w(x)
=
j
(~,M)
in
Oe:
M
with M = max (max I~I, max
of
°.
en
o
!w\) ,
we have the desired supersolution in all
- 133 -
E. Giusti In fact, let that
v 2. wand
vex)
be a Lipschitz-continuous function .in
0, such
supp (v-w) CO.
If we observe that
G(v) 2.G(min (v, M}) , it r emains to ·show only that G(min (v,M}) 2.G(w)
For that, let us remember that in
rE
port of the function
is in
in
~
, and hence
min (v,M}-w w(x)
we ha ve ~
is a supersolution i n
~(x)
2.M+l , so that the sup-
But
~(x)
is a supersolution
0 •
In an exactly similar way, we can construct a subsolution so' that
~eo-
rem 1.1 is completely proved. l H.
The existence of a solution for t he problem with smoot h obstacles ha s
been proved independently by Giaquinta an d Pepe Stampacchia (19]
.
also Miranda [21]).
[4J
and by Lewy and
We have followed es s ent ially t he methods of [4] (see Lewy and Stampa cchia work with general monot one opera-
tors, including the minimal surface operator, in the spirit of the variat ional inequalities.
Both in (4 ] and [19], one ca n f i nd the following regula rit y
result: I f the obstacle ~
1jr(x)
be l ongs to the Sobol ev space
is true for the s ol ution
u(x) •
continuously dif f er ent iabl e , then
u( x)
; , p( O)J n < p < + 00
In particula r, i f belongs to
,
the
1jr(x ) .ie.. t wice
el, a, f or every a < 1
This result is almost the best possibl e, since one ca n expe ct a t most to get a el,l-solution.
This poi nt , however, is not settled i n general; for
see Kinderlehrer
(11)
Th ,~
n
=2
cons truction of b,lrriers of section IF follows the lines
of the paper of Jenkins end Serrin
OQJ
a ) ' a ) an d a ) ffir.Y be found in Serrin 2 3 l The conclusion of Theorem 1.1 holds
; a proof of properti es
(24) •
- 134 -
E . Giusti if only one supposes that the boundary data some ex> 0
( s ee Giusti
[7J).
1
C'
belongs to
~(x)
The obstacle pr Dblem ha s been
ex , for '
consider~d
for
ot he r fu nctionals, in the framework of variational inequalities. For that, see Li ons and St ampa cc hia Stampacchia
[2.], and Lewy and
(20], Brezi s and Stampacchia
[18]
We di d not mention here the problem of the c ont a ct set ; i .e ., t he problem of the topological st ructure and of t he r egularity of the set in whi ch the s olut ion touches t he obsta cl e .
I n general , t his pr oblem i s completely
open; i n the 2 -dimensional case , some interesting r esults ca n be f ound in the papers of Lewy an d Stampac chi a
(18)
and of Kin derlehr er
(14] .
The
f i rst pape r deals with the obstacle problem fo r t he Dir i chlet integral and ze ro boundary data; if (x
€
0 : u( x) > 1jr(x ) )
is r eal analytic , then analytic curve.
1jr( x )
is strict l y concave , t hen the set
i s t opologically a n annulus . ~he
bounda ry of the set
(x
I f in add it ion €
0 : u (x)
1jr(x )
= 1jr( x ) )
Similar resul ts are proved by Kinderl ehrer for
i s an
minimal
sur f aces with obst a cles. For t he pa rametric probl em with obstacles, M. Mir anda t ha t every minimal surface wi th a Cl -obstac le in
[221 pr oves
En is of cla s s
l C
in a
neighborhood of t he obst acle . Finally, f or 2- dimens i onal su r faces i n Tomi
2.
[26] , Hildebrandt and Kau l
E3 , we ment i on the papers of
(9) , and Hildebra ndt
[8] .
Discontinuous a nd thin obst ac l e s j existence theory We shal l now consider the obstac le problem in which the i nequal i t y
u(x )
~
1jr( x)
is requi r ed t o be sat i s fi ed only on a clos ed s et
in, an d different from ,
O.
A conta ined
- 135 -
E . Giusti
is convenient to reduce this problem to an equivalent one , in
I~
which the set A does not enter explicitly .
If we define the new obstacle X € A ,
~(x )
'?i-A ,
X €
the inequality u 2:.
n
in
\jI
The new fUncti on
\jI
is identical to
the cons ideration of the problem and boundary datum
2A.
Let
n,
an d, since
A is
I n this way, we are naturally led to
[~,O,\jI]
with upper semi -continuous obs tacle
En , an d let ~(K)
upp er semi-continuous fUnctions i n K. ~(K)
in A •
~
K be a compact set in
bel ongs to
1jr
is now defined in all of
closed, it is upper semi - con tinuous.
\jI
u -2:.
be the cl a s s of all
It is known that a fUnction
f(x)
if and only if it is the pointwise limit of a decr ea s i ng
sequence of Lipschitz -continuous fUnctions (or, what is the same, of C~-fUnc -. t i ons ) ; f
k
~
f
in short, if there exists a sequence of
k
in
CO,l(K)
such that
.
For a function in
k~ ~
It is worth noting that
, we define the area functional :
~(K)
G(f) =. inf (lim inf
f
f
G(f )
~ Il+ \Dfk I2 dx; f~
K
€
CO, l ;
f
k
~
f) •
agrees with the derini tion given in lA when
is Lipschitz -continuous; this follows from the semi - continuity re sul t of
1A , observing t hat, for continuous
f , the convergence
f
n
I f
uniform conv er g0nce . We have t he following results: i) ii)
a(f)
a
coincides with the Lebesgue area for cont i nuous
is a convex functional .
f .
implies
- 136 -
E. Giusn iii)
If
fj
U(K)
is a sequence in
and
f j I f , then
f
€
U(K)
and
a(f) _ ~ lim inf u(f j) . CD iv)
j-t
If
u(~)
of
f
<
~
, then the derivatives (in the sense of
are measures, and
the total variation in v)
f
~f
and
g
f 11+\Df!2
K
1
the iast integral being
K of the vector-valued measure
U(K)
are in •
= u(g).
then a(f)
a(f)':::'
distri~utions)
(dx,Df)
f = g Hn- l-almost everywhere,
,and
is the j-dimensional Hausdorff measure in
(H j
En .) vi)
Let
n =~
where·.r let
gl
U ~
ur
(see Figure),
is a regular hypersurface; and
~
be Lipschitz-con-
tinuous functions in ~ and let
f
and ~,
be a positive Lipschitz-
r.
continuotis function in
Let.
rgl
in ~,
-t ~
vex)
in ~,
max (gl,~}+f
in
r .
Then a(v)
=
JA+IDg ~ + 2
vii)
Let
JfdH
r
2
dx
lI
_ == n l
n =~ u ~ u r
+ J 11+1%1 2 ~
dx
(f)
o
r
JI1+ Invl2 + 2 JfdH n _l n r
as before; then
a
+ f 1~-~ldH
= a (f)
'\
for every upper semi-continuous
+
f.
a
Ci;z
(f)
n
-1
- 137 -
E; Giusti 2B.
The following lemmas will be 'very/useful in the following.
The first
is essentially the Dini theorem on uniform convergence. ~ 2.1.
K , be !!. canpact set, and let
Let
such that
f
n
~
f.
Let
g(x)
Lemma 2.2.
0
Let
be!!. sequence in 'L«(K)
.!!!.'. K such that
continuous function
~!!.
g(x) > f(x) • ~ there exists
{f n}
such ~ g(x) > fn(X}
no
be!!. bounded open
~ in Bn with' 0' -boundary, ~ let
z'(x)
be the Lipschitz-continuous solution of the problem
w(x)
be!!. function in
(2.1) Proof.
0°,1(0) a(z)
+
J Iw-cpldHn-
00
[cp,O,V] •
Let
Then 1 •
Let ~(x)
and let
such ~ w ~ V
-< a(w)
for every
w = w + (z-w)~. k
= max'{O,
l-kd(x)} ,
We have
' On the other hand, lim
J~ID(Z-w)ldx =O,
k-+a> 0
a nd lim
f Iz-wl
k-+a> 0
so that
1~ldx = lim
(2.1) follows at once.
k-+a>
q.e.d.
k
f
~/ k
Iz-wldx =
J Iz-wldHn_l '
00
- 138 -
E . Giusti
2C. i§..
Theorem 2.1.
Let
•
0
be ~ bounded open set in
En
J
~c3-surface with .!!.Q!1.':'negative ~ curvature. Let
00 and
upper semi-continuous functions in
in
~
00. Suppose further that
Let
~+
l
2
sequence of Lipschitz-continuous functions in 0 V ~ V . j
pose that
be
\jr(x) S
Then there exists
-CD
00
J
and let
such that
Vj
~
be a and
Using Lemma 2.1(and possibly extracting subsequences), we can sup-
S
Vj
in·Oo.
Let
From Lemma 1.3 J we conclude that
We want to show that
u(x)
uj
is a decreasing sequence.
minimizes the area.
w(x) > \jrk(x)
for
k
k
~
a(u) < a(w) +
-
Kow let ' w(x)
.
w k
=
For that J let
w(x)
u(x) on
be
00
be a
By Lemma 2.1 J we have
CD ,
f
00 Iw-
be an upper semi-continuous function with
exists a sequence ~G(w)
u(x)
Let
big enough, so that, by Lemma 2.2 J
and hence J passing to the limit as (2.2)
and
w(x) > \jr( x )
Lipschitz-continuoUs function with
[
be the solution ot the problem
uj
the limit of u j ; we have trivially u(x) ~ \jr(x)
G(w k)
V(x)
[
be a sequence of C -functions in
and
n J respectively • .§.!!£!l. that
~ ~ semi -continuous solution of the problem
Proof.
00
~ boundary
in CO Jl
such that
Writing (2.2) for
w
k
v, (x) It
a(u)
~
\jr(x) ; there
> lJ!(x) ,
and passing to the limit, we have the
sa me inequality for upper semi-continuous functions It follows at once that
w(x)
is finite;
G(u) _< meas 0 +
f
00
w(x)
~
\jr(x)
in fact, we have
1m ...IdHn-l
- 139 -
E. Giusti.
Moreover, "i f the area . 2D.
w =~
do,
on
We say that a solution
on
in
tions
a(u) ~a(w) , and hence
u(x)
minimizes
q.e.d.
there exist two sequences ~n
we have
such t hat
u(x).to the problem 2 in C ( Qn)
~n
un(x) , solutions to the problem
Theorem 2.2 .
and *n
*n ~ * , and
~n ~ ~,
[ ~,n, *]
in
u( x)
is attainable if
CO,l(n) , with
*n
~
i s the limit of t he func-
[ ~n,n'*n]
The attainable solution i s unique.
This result is an immediate consequence of the following lemma . Lemma 2. 3 . [ ~,n, *]
Proof .
Let
and
Let
relative to gn > g.
u(x)
and
v(x)
be attainable solutions of 'the problems
[f,n,g] , ·r espect i vel y .
~n'
u
*n
and
and
~ ~ f
Suppose that
f n, gn be two
v, respectively.
ca~ples
and * ~ g .
of approxi mat i ng sequenc es,
We can suppose tha t
From Lemma 2 .1, i t follows t hat, for every
f
n
> f
and
n, there exists a
k
n
such t hat
f or every
k > k
n
J
so that Lemma 1.3 gives in
Passing t o t he limit as
2E.
k
~
00
,
an d t her e a s
n
~oo
J
n
we get t he conclusion .
In a similar way, one can pr ove the following result :
q .e.d .
- 140 -
E . G iusti (1jr )
Pronos i tion 2 .1 . fu nct ions in ~
't hat
n
the nr oblem
0 ~
2F.
do ,
a nd
cP
and
respectively , s uch t ha t
*n I '.jr , and let
[cpn,O)*n]
t o the problem
be tw o s e que nc e s of
n
Then
un
~
*n .s n
on
semi -c ont i nuous
do .
Sup-
be the a t ta i na bl e solut i on to
un I u ) and
u
i s the atta inable s olut i on
[cp,O,*J .
The problem of the uniquenes s of the solution is compl etely op en .
Of
c ou rse ) it follows from 2A(v ) t hat every function in ~(O) , differen t f r om a s olut i on only i n a s et of z ero ( n - l ) - dimens i ona l mea sure) i s i t s elf a solu tion.
I t would be int er e sting to prove that these a re the only poss ibl e sol -
u tions) a nd it would be very surprising to s how t hat this i s not the ca s e . Let us note that ) if
cP
and
* are co nti nuous )
i t f ollows by
Lemma s 2 .1 and 1 .4 t ha t the a t tai na bl e solution is continuous . this is the only cont inuous solution ( s ee [ 4
1 a nd ( 19J;
a l t hou gh constructed
in different ways ) the two solut ions a re a ct ual l y the same) . on t his su bj ect is Gi u s t i
[ 5] .
quite
In this ca s e)
The liter atu r e
scarce ; we have followed he re the method of
To my knowledge ) t his is the only ge ne ral ex istence result
fo r non -parametr ic discontinuou s a nd th i n obstacles .
J. C. C. Nitsche
( 2 3] ,
who f i rst considered the problem) proved the existence of a continuou s s olu tion i n the 2 -dimen s ional case , when the obstacl e is gi ve n on a s t ra i ght line, a nd
0
i s symmetr i cal with r e spect t o i t.
Recently, Ki nderlehrer
[1 3J
r emov ed t he assumpt ion of symmetry and p roved a s imilar r esult for gene ral va r iat i ona l inequal ities . ~he
For t he pa rametric case , De Giorgi
existence of minimal su rfaces with t hin ob st a cl e s.
[3J
ha s proved
- 141 -
E . Giusti
3.
Regularity of
~
attainable ,solution; the. favorable
~
We shall show in this chapter that, under suitable assumptions, the (attainable) solutions to the Plateau problem with discontinuous and thin obstacles are Lipschitz-continuous in 0
3A. Let us start with a particular case.
Let
*
be an open set, with elosure
(~,O~~,*]
contained in 0, and consider the problem that
~
Let uS 'suppose
2 C and that the mean curvature of ~
is of class
is non-negative.
In this case . it is possible to construct a Lipschitz-continuous subsolution
",(x) . in
~,' tak-
ing the prescribed values on
dol
(see Section
W l
be the function
and let
u(x) If
in
0-01
w(x)
1).
*(x) Let
in
O-~
in
~"
be the solution to the problem
[~,O'*l]
is a Lipschitz-continuous function such that
and w(x)
= ~(x)
in
do, we have
a(u)
.s a(w)
.
In fact, since
",(x)
Now let
be a sequence, whose first element is
Wj(x)
w(x) ~ W(x)
is a subsolution, one has
Wl(x) , ~onotonically
- 142 -
E. Giusti converging to the function
~(x)
From the preceding remark, we conclude that solution of all the problems
is the (unique)
[~,O'~j]' and hence it is the attainable solu-
[~,O~,~]
tion of problem 3B.
u(x)
Let us consider now the general case of discontinuous obstacles.
It is
clear from the preceding discussion that the solution will be Lipschitz-continuous if only we can construct a subsolution ~(x)
= *(x)
dA n a , and that
in
in
~(x)
~(x) ~ ~(x)
a-A, such that
on that part of
00 which
does not belong to A . It is clear that the possibility of such construction will depend on the mean curvature of Theorem 3 .1.
dA . To be precise, we have the following theorem:
Suppose that there exists a n ~ set
B, whose boundary
2m
is ~ C3-manifold of .!l2!2-negative ~ curvature, such that
a-A Then the problem ~ontinuous
?roof.
anB.
[~,A,~] ,with ~ and
~ of class C2, has a Llpschitz-,
attainable solution.
Extend
~(x) toa C2-function in En, which we again call ~(x) ,
in such a way that to a function in
~(x) ~ ~(x)
En, such that
on
dB
n a = dA n a.
~(x) ~ *(x)
in
Next, extend
*(x )
dB. Now we can use the
procedure of Theorem 1.3 in order to construct a subsolution
~(x)
in
B,
- 143 -
E. Giusti
su ch that role of ~
= ~( x )
A( X) and
~
in
dB, and
w a r e cha nged in this case)
is the boundary datum .)
in .B
A(~) ~~(x ) ~
The f unction . A( X)
is now the obstacle , a nd
provides the r equ i red
q.e .d .
sub s ol ut i on .
The same idea works i n the case of thin obstacle s .
3C.
( Not e that the
Suppos e ,.
is gi ven
as the null set of a C3- funct i on ~ (x )
(x
A
suc h that (x
€
I D~ 1 ~ 0
0 : ~ (x ) > 0
Theo r em 3 .2 .
0
Denote by
on A ( resp. ,
€
~( x) =
0+
o) ,
( resp.,
0 _)
the s et
< C)} . We have the fol lowing r e su lt :
~(x )
Supnose t hat the re exist two open sets
B+
~.£.
C3- bOunda ry hav i ng non-nega tive mean curvature , su ch that
0+
the nroblem u~
[ ~ ,A, W],
with
cp
and
W of class
§..
= 0 n B+
. Then
Lips chitz -c ontin-
att a i na ble soluti on . It i s wor t h noting that t he sets
has zero mean curvature , and t his becau s e ti on, to both
3D.
2
C , ha s
B_ , with
B+ a nd
B
can exist only i f
A
A bel ongs, with different or i ent a-
dB+ and dB
'rh o i de a of "filling th ,; hole" by means of
8.
s u bs ol u t i on
b~ en introduced by Giusti (5J a n d , inde pendently, by Kinderl ehrer [13] • Wi t h ~±~~ the s a me method stampacchia and has
Vi gnoli
[25]
prove the a na l og ou s of Theorem 3.1 for solutions
to non-coercive variational inequalities. I f t h ef unctions
cf
and
continuous , then the solut ion Lipschitz -continuous, then exponent .
t
u(x )
a~~
if
~
ane
is continuous , an d i f
~
and
ware
i s Hold er -c ontinuous , with some pos i tive
In a ddition, if t he set
mea n curvature ,
i n Theprems 3.1 and 3.2 are
u(x )
~
B in Theorem 3 .1 has bounda r y of po sitive are Holder -continuous
with exp onent
a,
- 144 -
E. Gi usti then the solution is Holder-cuntinuous
withex~unent
0/2
(for details,
se~
Giusti [6 ·]). Another interesting problem is the nature of the contact set; Le., the set where
u(x) = ' ~(x) •
;ional case when the set cave/ and
Here, the only results known are in the 2-dimen-
A is a straight line.
If t he obstacle
.~
is con-
Dirichlet integral (Lewy [16]) and for the area Recently, Lewy [17]
integn1~ed
(Nitsche [23]).
proved for the Dirichlet integral that, if
~
is real
"anal yti c , the contact set consists at most of a finite number of intervals and a f1nite number of points.
4.
Regularity of the at t ainabl e "Solution; the general case In this final section, we shall discuss the regularity of the solution
to the Plateau problem with discontinuous and thin obstacles in the general case, Le., without imposing any condition on the mean curvature of the boundaryof A. 4A.
We start with an J! priori estimate for t he gradient of solutions to the
problem with smooth obstacles. Theorem 4.1.
Let
L and
M be two positive numbers, and let
Lipschitz-continuous :.:;fun=:.:;c..:;t:.:;i:.:;on::. in _th_e_ _b_a_l_l B(xo,R), mal surface
equation
~
u(x)
be a
solution to _th_e_ _ m_i _n _i -
- 145 -
E
W and such t hat po(R,M,L)
u(x)
~
~
(x
€
B(x o ,R) ; u(x) > u(x 0 )-L) ,
u(x o) + M in
Q(R,M,L)
(4.1)
B(xo,R) .
Then
~
exist constants
such that
X
€
sup IDu(x) I ~ Q . B(xo'p o)
A consequence of the previous theorem is the following result.
4B.
Theorem 4.2.
Let
CD
and
iIr
be upper semi -continuous fu nctions, and l et
u(x)
be the solution to the problem
have
u(x o) > w(x o ) , then
of'
Giusti
x
[cp,O,'!') • If., for ~ X o
1.2. Lipschitz-continuous i n
u(x)
(1 ,
€
ne ighbo rhood
~
o
Proof.
Let
2L
= u(x o )
- W(x 0 ) .
Ther e exists a
~a ll
B(x ,R) o
su ch t hat
,!,(x ) < u(x o) - L in t he closure of B(xo,R) • Let ('!'k) and (CPk) 2 s equences of C - funct i ons S~Ch that '!'k ~ '!' in n , CPk I cP i n On CPk ? Wk that
On. Let
in
u.
~ ~
For
On the other hand, the set ~(Xo)-L)
(x .
€
n :
k
~
big enough, we have
~( x)
~(x)
~
,
1Irk ( x ) :< u(x o ) - L
and
, so
~ ~(J!:o )
- L
is a solution of the mi nimal surfac es equation in
> 1Irk (x )) , and hence i n the set
In addition, we have
ball of radius
be t wo
be the solution to the problem [CPk,O, 1Irk l
~(x) ~M
k = (x
,W
= ~x u1(x)
€
(1 :
uk( x) >
From the preced-
(1
ing theorem, we get
in
,Ie
Po' with
same is true for the limit
Po and
u( x) .
Q independents of
q.e.d.
k, so that the
- 146 -
E . Giusti
4c. The applications of Theorem 4.2 to the regularity problem are evi dent. We get immediately that the solution is regular away from the obstacle, i.e. , in
O-A •
Another consequence of the previous result is the following. Theorem 4.3. u(x)
Let
\jI
and
cp
be
be the solution to the problem
and suppose that the function in
~
B.
Let
Proof.
"s h
Then
xo
pose then that ing to X o lim inf k~'"
u(x
o)
We have
\jI(~
K
)
= \jI(x
·0
[cp,O,\jI] '. Let
\jiB' rest riction of
also continuous in
B. .
€
s emi-continuous fu nctions, and l ee
Ir u(x
= \jI(xo) \jI(xo)
o)
\jI
to
= u(x o) u
B.
{~}
be a sequence in
k~'"
Sup-
B, converg-
~ lim sup u(~) ~ lim inf u(~)
>
k~'"
is continuous at
B
0,
B, is continuous
> \jI(xo) , the conclusion is trivial.
, and let
) , so that
B be.§i subset of
x
q.e.d.
0
It may be worth noting that no assumption is made on the set
B.
In
Jarticular, for discontinuous and thin obstacles, we can conclude that t he restriction of
u(x)
same is true for
to the set A, u A
is continuous in A , provided the
\jIA
4D. We shall now consider the problem of the continuity of the solution u(x)
when x
approaches a point
x
o
in
We need the following
lew~a,
which is a simple generalization of Theorem 1.3.
~ 4.1. Let and let
eo
0
be.§i bounded open set with boundary
g(x)
3 ,
C
do, Suppose that the mean curvature of
1§. .!!2!!.-negative in .§i neighborhood of the support of
exists .§i subsolution
do of class
vex) , taking the values
g(x)
in
g.
00
.Th!:E. there
- 147 -
E. Giusti Remark.
It -is easily seen that the conclus ion of the preceding lemma holds .
supp "g
In fact, let "' \
Q ~ One~ .
~hat
define
4E.
vex)
=0
i s a C3-surface in a neighborhood
On
if~we only suppose that
We can appl y t he preceding lemma to ' \ ' and then
in a~l
Let us consider first the case of discontinuous obstacles, and let us
suppose that ·the boundary of A in that a point
dA
X ' €
o
na
Theorem 4.4 .
dA n a
,
Let
cp
and
~~~
Proof .
x
o '
Then
from
u(x)
seen from
a-A
B R
= ",(x)~(x)
ing the value
at
~~
'" 1£ dA
cp
na
continuous in
>
0
• g(x)
as a point of pos itive mean cur· x
o
is positive. X
o
be
~
in
= B(xo,R)
On,
~.9f.. class
2
C
neippborhood of
~
and
'" > 0
"'l ( x )
X
o .
a.
in
By continu-
OA n BR
such that every point in
B such that R,
d(a-A) •
point in
in ~ neighbor-
0
Let
S ~(x) S 1
~( x )
in
From Lemma 4.1, we get a subsolution v(x) in
We say
poi nt of positive mean curvature. Sup-
is
be a
B 2 , and let R/ in
a-A,
tak-
Let
u(x)
be
The function
"'( X)
in A,
= \ v(x)
i s upper semi-continuous in
a,
the solution to the problem
[CP,O' '''l] •
the problem
is a C3-surface.
as a point of positive mea n curvature.
C~-function with support in
g(x)
na ,
a-A
d( a -A)
a-A
~
We can suppose that
ity, there exists a ball
dA
'" be continuous, and let
pose that the restriction ·of of
a,
is seen from
vature if the mean curvature of
~.
a
be an open subset of
Q of
with C3-boundary, such
in
a-A
and 'is continuous in
B 2• R/
It is easily seen that
u(x)
[cp,A,If] • The conclusion then follows fran Theorem 4.3.
solves
- 148 -
E. Giusti A similar result holds for thin obstacles: Theorem 4.5.
Suppose that
l!!Y* . - Let
X
~
k continous. and that 1jr(x)
point in A that
k
~
0+ • ~ the restriction of
curvature from
4F.
be
o
q>
as
u(x)
~
is
~ C2 -function
-poi nt of positive mean
k continuous at
to 0+
All the results in this s~ction are proved by Giusti 'l 6] .
The!!. 'p:r>i or i
estimate (4.1) is a generalization of the result of Bombieri, De Giorgi and Miranda
[1] .
Since the Fl'"rnearance of that paner, many authors have dis-
cussed the existehce of ~priori estimates. for the gradient of solutions to non-linear non-coercive elliptic differential equations. of Ladyzenskaja and Ural'ceva of the
~
[15]
We mention here the articles
and--Trudinger
(27).
A very short proof
priori estimate for minimal SUL-J.i:1<.:es can be found in Trudinger
(:1,8)
.
It would be interesting to prove an !!.. priori estimate of the type
sup IDu(x)
I~Q
BR/2
Q depending only
for minimal surfaces with obstacles, with and the obstacle tions for the
(possibly only on
1Jr
function ,..
sup
R, sup lui,
BRregularity assump-
BR :
(x) in Theorem' 4.4 and 4.5 can be weakened. The con-
elusion of these theorems remains true if in particular if
IThjr D • The
OL
1jr(x)
1jr(x) _i s Holder-continuous.
verifies a Dini condition, On the other hand, one would
.Like to obtain a better result (i.e., Lipschitz continuity) where the obstacle is regular. This seems to depend on an improvement of Theorem 4.3. For instance it woulQ
uc
interesting to show that, if
open set, the solution remark that, using
a
u(x)
1jr(x) is Lipschitz-continuous in an
is Lipschitz-continuous there also.
result of Miranda (22) , one can prove that
Let us u(x)
is
- 149 -
E. Giusti of cl a s s
l C
(s ee ~ 61).
i n ever y open se t i n wh icr.
V
is continuously diff erentiabl e
However , this r esult cannot be a ppl i ed t o s ituations l ike t hat
con sidered in Theorem 4.4, since the obsta cl e ea s ily seen t hat an
~
pri ori
e s t i~ te
*1
i s not i n
for t he 5radient of
Cl .
~ inimal
It i s su rfa ce s
wi t h obstacles, of the t ype described ab ove , would settle t his que s t ion. Always referring to the s ituat ion studied i n Theorem 4.4, i t i s the opi ni on of t he author that the solution ~ood
of any point
x
in
dA n o,
mean curvature gr eat er than on
*.
-£0
u(x)
..:) continuous' in a neighbor-
which is seen fr om
O-A a s a po int of
Eo be i ng a positive number , dependir.g
A related conjecture i n t he cas e of t hin obstacles woul d be tr.e c or.-
tinuity of the 'solution at every point on t he obstacle in whi ch the absoluce value of the mean cu rvatur e is l es s than some posit ive However , it does not seem pos sible to get
t~ese
Eo
deper.dir.g on
r esu l t s us ing the
sa~e ~et~ od
- 150 -
E. Giusti References
1. Bombieri, E., E. De Giorgi and M. Miranda, Una maggiorazione a priori relativa alle ipersuperfici minimali non parametriche. Mech. Anal.
X
Arch. Rational
(1969), 255-269.
2 . Brezis, H., and G. Stampacchia, Sur la regularite de la s ol.utn.on d I Lnequatdons elliptiques.
Bull. Soc. Math. France .2Q. (1968),
15~-180.
3. De Giorgi, E., Frontiere orientate di misura minima con ostacoli sottili. Sem. Mat. Scuola Norm. Sup. Pisa (to appear).
4. Giaquinta, M., and L . Pepe, Esistenza e regolarita per il problema dell' area minima con ostacoli in
n
variabili.
Ann. Scuola Norm. Sup. Pisa
~ (1971). 481-507 .
5 . Giusti, E., Superfici minime cartesiane con ostacoli discontinui.
Arch.
Rational Mech. Anal. 40 (1971). 251-267 .
6. Giusti, E., Non-parametric minimal surfaces with discontinuous and thin obstacles.
7.
Arch. Rational Mech. Anal. (to appear).
Giusti, E., Boundary behavior of non-parametric minimal surfaces. Univ. Math. J. (to appear).
Indiana
- 151 -
E. Giusti 8. Hi l debrandt , S., On the regularity of solutions of two-dimensional va r iat i onal
proble~s
with obstructions (to appear) .
9. ,Hi l debr a ndt , S., and H. Kaul, Two-dimensional variational problems with obstructions, and Plateau's problem for H-surfaces in a Riemannian manifold .
Coxm. Pure Appl. Mat h . (to appear).
10. J enkins, H., and J. Serrin, The Dirichlet problem for the minimal surface equation in higher dimension.
J. Reine Angew. Math. 229 (1968),170-187 .
11. Ki n d e r l eh r er , D., Th e r-egu.La r-i, ty of solutions uo certain
V 8-
r'L a tional ine qu ali ties. Proe. Summer Lns t , on Pa r-t , Diff. Eq ,
Bez-k e Ley 1971. (to a np e8r)
12 . Kinderlehrer, D., The coinci dence set of solutions of ce rtain variational inequalities.
Arch. Rat i onal Mech. Anal. 40 (1971), 231-250.
,13 . Kinderlehrer, D., Variational inequalities with lower dimensional obstacles Israel J. Mat h . 10 (1971), 339-348. 14. Kinderlehrer, D., How a minimal surface
leaves an obstacle. Acta
Math. (to appear). 15. Ladyze nskaja, O. A., and N. N. Ural'ceva, Local estimates for gradients , of solutions of non-unifonnly elliptic and parabolic equations. Pure Appl. Math•• 23 (1970), "1-10~
Comm.
- 152 -
E. Giusti 16. LeWYJ H., On a variational problem with i ne qual i t i e s on the bounda ry. J . Mat h . Mech .
11. (1968), 861- 884.
-17. Lewy, H., On the coincidence set in variational inequalities.
J. -Di f -
ferential Geometry (to appear).
18. Lewy, H., and G. Stampacchia, On the regularity of the so lution of a variational inequality.
Comm , Pure Appl. Math . 22 (1969), 153-188.
19. Lewy, H., and G. Stampacchia, On ex i st ence and smoothnes s of s olutions of some non- coe r cive var-Iatdona.L inequalit ie s.
Arch . Rat i onal Mech . Anal.
41 (1971), 241-253.
20. Lions, J. L. , and G. Stampacchia, Variational
i nequ~lit i e s .
Comm . Pure
Appl. Mat h . 20 (1967), 493-519.
21. Miranda, M., Un teorema di esistenza ed area minima in
n
variabili.
unicit~
per il problema dell'
A=. Scuola Norm. Sup. Pisa
12. (1965),
233-249.
22. Mi.randa, M. , Frontiere minimali con ostac oj.t ,
(1971), 29-37·
A=. Univ , Ferrara 16
- 153 -
E. Giusti
23. Nitsche, J. C.
C., Variational problems with inequalities as boun-
dary conditions. Arch. Rational Mech. Anal. 35 (1969). 83-113. 24. Serrin, J., The problem of Dirichlet for .qu a s ili n e a r elliptic differential equations with many independent variables; Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. London, Ser. A, 25 . Stampacchia, G.
and A.
264 (l969) 413-496.
Vignoli, A remark on variational in equal i--
ties for a second order non linear differential operator with non lipschitz obstacles. Boll. U.M.I. (4)
E.
(1972) 123-131.
26 . Tomi, F., Minimal surfaces and surfaces of prescribed mean curvature spanned over obstacles. Math . Ann. 190 (l971) 248-264. 27 . Trudinger, N. S., Gradient estimates and mean curvature (to appear) . 28. Trudinger, N. S., A new proof of the interior. gradient bound for the minimal surface equation in U.S.A. (to appear).
n
dimension. Proc. Nat . Acad, Sci.
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE MATEMATICO ESTIVO (C.I.M.E.)
J. GUCKENHEIMER
SINGULARITIES IN SOAP-BUBBLE-LIKE AND SOAP-FILM-LIKE SURFACES
Corso
tenuto
a
Varenna
dal
24
agosto
al
2
settembre
1972
SINGULARITIES IN SOAP-BUBBLE-LIKE AND SOAP-FILM-LIKE SURFACES
JEAN GUCKENHEIMER(l)
Four fundamental questions in the calculus of variations . are,: (1) (2)
The existence of solutions; The regularity of these solutions; (3) The structure at the singular sets, if any, in these' solutions; and (4) The computation of the solutions. For many geometric integrands with natural constraints, the first two problems are now solved. In particular, the two dimensional surfaces in R3 which are "soap-bubble-like" and "soap-film-like" (to be defined precisely below), have recently been shown by Almgren [AF1] to exist and be analytic sUbmanifolds of R3 except for ' a compact singular set of zero two dimensional Hausdorff measure(2). In these notes I will give a complete answer to the third question above for these surfaces - that is, I will give a complete cJassification of the local structure of the singularities in "soap-bubble-like" and Jlsoap-film-like" surfaces. In so doing, I will also introduce several techniques of geometric measure theory not presented elsewhere at this conference, such as tangent cones, "excess", and proof by contradiction; additionally, I will show how concepts presented elsewhere such as regarding
1.
The research work was supportes in part by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship.
2.
Hausdorff k-dillenBional measure, denoted 1'1. k, agrees with any other reasonable definition of area on smooth k-dimensional sUbmanifolds but additionally gives a precise me~ ing to area when singularities may ,be present; for an exact definition of Hausdorff area, see Almgren's lecture notes for this conference [AF2].
- 15 8 -
J. Guck enheim er-
surfaces as measures [AF2] and monotonicity [AW] are used in the solution to this problem. I would also like to note that ~he mathematical condit'ions used to define II s oap- bubbl e- l i ke ll and II s oap- f i l m- l i ke ll surfaces are at least approximately those imposed by the physics of actual soap bubbles and films. Therefore the classification of the local structure I will give for these surfaces can be considered to be in fact a classification for true soap bUbbles and soap films. In particular, it is a mathematical verification of the century-old Plateau's axioms on the nature of singularities in soap bubbles and soap filrr ~ [PJ]. Soap-bubble-like surfaces are defined to be solutions to the partitioning problem in R3 - that is, given positive numbers a l, ••• , aN' for some N, we seek disjoint regions AI' ••. , AN such that {il3(A i )=8.i for each i=l, • •• , N and such that
-~{ 2( i~h oAi) is a minimum among all such regions. This definition implies the following characteristic variational equation: -!-\ 2 (S"W h( l+Kr) 1-\ 2(~ (Snw) ) where S is a II s oap- bubbl e- l i ke ll surface-i.e. a solution to the partitioning problem
f: R3~R3
is Lipchitz
=[x: ~(x):Jx1 r = diameter (Wu~(W) )..(£ for some preassigned &)0. K is a constant related to the maximum mean curvature of the analytic part of S. A typical solution for N=3 is shown in figure 1. Similarly, soap-film-like surf~ces with boundary in a compact set B are defined to be closed surfaces which are area minimizing with no constraints except with respect to B; that is, soap-film-like surfaces are surfaces which sati8fy the characteristic variational formula W
- 15 9 -
J . Guckenh eimer
Jl 2 (Snwk V. 2( <9(snw» where ~ and Ware as above, with the additional condition (Wu4'(W)~ n B = ~. As an illustration of the type of Lipchitz maps which must be . considered, let qs look at the following one dimensional:analog. Let B be 't he 4 points at the corners of a square: One closed one-dimensional set S with this boundary is two diagonal line segments; however, a deformation ~ which squeezes the central region down to a line as in figure ' 1 2 results in a surface <jJ(SJ\ with i t1 (t\l(S»
i-t 2 (Sru3(p, r) ) ~ \{ 2 (p'~O (SnB( p, r )
=
(r/2 )'K 1 ( 0 (SnB( p, r ) ) )
~ (r/2)( d/dr )( ~~ 2(S()B(p, r»).
- 160 -
J. Guckenheimer
Letting mer) = 11. 2(SnB(p,r)), we see that (d/dr)(log(m(r))'?O which implies m(~)/r2 increases monotonically as r increases. The analogous relation for soap-bubble-like surfaces is that eKrm(r)/r2 is monotonically increasing. This fundamental result can be viewed in another way. Let Sr be the surface obtained by translating SnB(p,r) so that p is at thee orifin an~,tihen expanding this lutface by see i~ure"t a factor of l/r~ we ave tha oS lies on the unit sphere 2 2 r and}t (Sr) = m(r)/r. The above monotonicity relation thus states thattl 2(Sr) decreases monotonically as r decreases towards zero; since it is always nonegative, it must have a limit, and this limit ~y be recognized as precisely
~2(l~~S, p )-'11; where~2(t"t2LS,p) is the density of S at p (AF2]. If we now choose a sequence of radii r i decreasing to zero, the resulting surfaces Sri might behave wildly as surfaces (see (AF2]). However, as measures, since the surfaces Sri lie in a bounded region of R3 and have bounded areas, some SUbsequence must converge. Any limit to any such subsequence is defined to be a tangent ~ to p at p; we see that monotonicity implies immediately the existence of tangent cones at every point p in S. We note in passing that if C is a tangent cone to S at p, then {A.2(C) =~2(V-2LS,p)·n. Two properties of any such tangent cone C are that C is a cone (that is, its support consists of rays from the origin to a boundary on the unit sphere), and that C is area minimizing. These properties in turn imply that oC consists of geodesic segments intersecting 3 at a time at equal (120 0 ) angles. It happens that one can completely classify all the boundaries that satisfy these latter two conditions.
- 101
J. Gu ckenheimer
THEOREM [GJ2]. ]E to orthogonal rotations, there ~ precisely eight I-dimensional configurations Qn the unit sphere which ~ composed of segments of great circles intersecting precisely 3 at .!!: time at 12'0 0 angles; these ~ (1) ~ single great circle, (2) 3 half great circles (at 120 0 to each other), (3) 6 great circle segments forming the ~-skeleton of .!!: regular spherical tetrahedron, (4) 12 segments forming the ~-skeleton of .~ spherical cube, (5) 9 segments forming the ~-skeleton of ~ certain spherical prism over ~ regular triangle, (6) 15 segments forming the ~-skeleton of ~ certain spherical prism. over ~ regular pentagon, (7) 30 segments forming the one-skeleton of ~ regular spherical dodecahedron, and (8) 24 segments forming 2 quadrilaterals and 8 pentagons. Furthermore, only the cones over (1), (2) and (3) ~ ~ minimizing, and hence, ~ to orthogonal rotations, these ~ the only possible tangent cones to soap-film-like and soap-bubble-like surfaces. The cone over any great circle is just a disk; choosing a specific such great circle, we denote this cone by D. The cone over any configuration as (2) above is three half disks at 1200; choosing a specific such configuration we denote the cone by Y. The cone over any configuration as in (3) consists of 6 wedges meeting at equal angles at the origin; again, the cone over some specific such configuration is denoted by T. We note that D, Y, and T all have different areas and hence the density at any point of S determines its tangent cones there up to rotations. The cones Y and Tare sketched in figure 5. Knowing the poss ible tangent cones gives a great amount of information on the local structure of the surface; however, we can prove much more.
- 162 -
J. Guckenheimer
THEOREM [GJ2). Let §. be [the interior of) ~ soap-filmlike or soap-bubble-like surface. Then: (1) There exist unique tangent cones at every point of S [this says that for any sequence· r. decreasing to zero as ~ above, the measures corresponding to the surfaces Sri converge; this is not a trivial result.]; (2) R(S)~ { p : tangent cone to S at p is ~ rotation of D } is ~ two dimensional analytic submanifold of R3, each connected component of which has constant mean curvature, and ~ 2(R(S)) = -\-\ 2(8) [AFl);-(3) cJy(Sh lP: tangent cones to S at p is some rotation of y '} is ~ I-dimensional Holder continuously differentiable submanifold of R3, and for each PCqy(S) there exists ~ neighbood N of p such that S~N consists of the union of three 2-dimensional Holder-continuously differentiably manifolds with boundary meeting tangentially at 120 0 angles, the boundary of each being precisely N 0~y(S) [this is in part a statement of how smoothly the analytic part of S meets the singularity O-y (S ) ] ; (4)
- 16 3 -
J. Guckenheimer
inequality because of its relationship to an analogous inequaiity of the same name proved by Reifenberg [REIJ. Before stating it, however, let us define a parameter, the spherical excess, which serves to monitor the behaVior of a surface at small radii. We let ExCB(S,p,r) = r,-2 eKr m(r) - 3Ti/2, wQ€re K is understood to be zero for soap-film-like surfaces; fdr points with rotations of Y as a tangent cones we see that by monot oni.caty ExCB(S,p,r) ~ 0 and lim ExCB(S,p,r) = O. 1'-'0
For points .wi t h rotations of T as tangent cones, we define the analogous parameter with3coS-l(-1/3) replacing 3~/2 . For all p, we note that if r is s mall enough, Sr lies close to some tangent cone. The epiperimetric inequality can now be phrased as follows: There exist £ >0, ~ )O, ~ < w, and k>O such that if (1) S is soap-bubble-like or soap-film-like, p ~S, r < ~, Sr is as defined before, (2) 0 ~ ExcB(O~Sr,O,l) ' (; ( 3) 0 <. distance (0*,OSr,8Y) <"'~ for some 8 ( SO( 3 ), the group of orthogonal rotations (distance here is precisely the flat norm of the difference as measures [FH 4.1.24J), then there exists a surface Z, obtained from o.;(oSi- by a Lipchitz deformation of R3, satisfying oZ = oSr and ExCB(Z,O,l)
~
(l-k)
ExcB(O~Sr,O,l) +~Kr.
One notes that the conditions are indeed satisfied f or soap-bubble-like and soap-film-like surfaces for small r, and i nt e rp r et s the i nequa l i t y as stating that except for the term i Kr (which is zero f or S soap-film-like), one can save area uniformly compared to the cone by a deformation of the cone; and in fact the amount of area saved is proportional) by t he f a ct or (l-k), to the excess of t he cone.
- 164 -
J. Guckenheimer
Once such an inequality is proved, one uses t he cuaracteristic variational inequality and calculations as in the proof of monotonicity to deduce ExcB(S,p,r) ~
(1-k)(r/2)(d/dr) ExCB(S,p,r) + ExcB(S,p,r)]
+ (Q.+2n)Kr
and from this
o ~ ExcB(s,p,r)~Ar2k
for small r. This polynomial bound to the growth of excess limits the amount of twisting of the surface in small regions, and in fact is sufficient to prove unique tangent cones. It is also sufficient to prove all the other conclusions of the theorem, the Holder exponent of the 1- dimensional submani.fold in (2) being k and the other Holder exponents being k/2. Thus the key to the proof of the theorem is the proof of the epiperimetric inequality. This proof is by contradiction, which is characteristic of the proofs in the SUbject. The availability of this technique, which ultimately rests on the compactness properties of surfaces regarded as measures, makes possible proofs that would otherwise be extremely difficult; however, as a result there are usually no a priori estimates on the constants involved. In particUlar, in this theorem there is no estimate for the size of the Holder exponents. The contradiction of the inequality asserts the existence of certain sequences of numbers k v ' ~v, E.,~, and cones S The proof that such sequences cannot occur goes through several steps which progresively limit the compleXity of the cones one must consider. For instance, because a rectifiable set can be apprOXimated arbitrarily closely by a Cl manifold, one need only consider Cl manifolds with nice self intersections along their boundaries; through an isoperimetric inequality such as proved in [AW] and graph theory techniques, one eventually reduces 'the problem to considering simply cones over three arcs.
- 165 -
J . Guckenheimer
Once one is dealing just with sequences of cones over three arcs, one defines a new excess ExCy(s~) as follows. The cone over the three arcs must lie close to some orthogonal rotation of Y, by the distance hypothesis. One chooses the IIbest possible ll such rotation and extends radially the cone over each single arc in turn until the boundary of the extension projects orthogonally, by the projection defined by the appropriate half plane of Y, into the unit circle in that the plane centered at O. One then defines ~ t h arc) ExCy(Sy) =21=l(Area of extension of cone over i (Area of projection of this extension)]. This new excess is proven to be related to the old in the folloWing two ways: lim
(easy) ExcB(S.,p,r ) ~ ExCy(Sv)
(hard)
Noting that the extended surface can be regarded as lying within the original cone by simply shrinking it by a factor of 1/2, one concludes that if the contradiction of the epiperimetric inequality holds for ExC B, it also holds (With different sequences k;', f y"', P...· ) for Excy. But now we have surfaces lying over their projections, when we consider each arc independently, and we can apply the powerful methods of Almgren {AF] to conclude that the surfaces must in fact be very close (i.e. within a constant times ExC y(Sv)1/2) to being the graphs of harmonic functions. The two conditions of being a cone and being very close to harmonic imply that the surface is very close to a plane; the three planes corresponding to the three arcs cannot all be at 120 o to each other because the Excy has to come from some- where. One shows that at least one of the angles between the planes must differ from 120 0 by at least a constant times 1/2 ExC y I (S v) • It is then purely a geometric argument to see that i f the angles differ from 120 0 by C.(ExC y(S v))1/2, then one can deform t he plan~s near the center line until they are
- 166 -
J. Guckenheimer
at 120 0 angles and in so doing save area proportional to ExCy(Sv). But tbis gives us a final contradiction of the contradictionJ and the epiperimetric inequality must therefore hold for some k > OJ ~'> 0, ~ ) 0 and ~
- 16 7-
J . Guckenheimer
REFERENCES
[AFl]
[AF2]
[AW ] [FH ] [GJl]
[GJ2]
[PJ]
[RE]
F . J. Almgren, Jr., Existence and regularity almost everywhere of solutions to elliptic variational problems with constraints (in preparation). ________~, Lecture notes, this conference. William K. Allard, Lecture notes, this conference. H. Federer, Geometric Measure Theory (SpringerVerlag, New York, 1969) Jean Guckenheimer, Regularity of the singular set of two-dimensional area minimizing flat chains modul o 3 in R3, Ph.D. thesis, Princeton University, 1973.' _________, The structure of singularities in soap bubble- and soap film-type minimal surfaces ( i n preparation) • J.A.F. Plateau, Statique Experimentale et Theorique des Liquides Soumis aux Seules Forces Moleculaires, (Gauthier-Villard, Paris, 1873). E. R. Reifenberg, An Epiperimetric Inequality "r el at ed to the analyticity of minimal surfaces, Ann. of Math.
(1) 80, 1-14 (1964).
- 168 -
J. Guckenheimer
FIGURE
1
.. 169 ..
J. Guckenheimer
Lf
/
s R.~-R"). bp\:.hi+~>
+0
t\\lc:rl=
~(~,~':\-'1/I~I)
FIGURE
J..
K \ ( S')
I
Z
s ~
o+he-r\l,)\5e..)
1<'). b'j ~ir~b«"o.v.V\'~lheo("e'lV\ LF ~ .IO.~;o .
. U I (~ (S )
s e,-tl S~~"I "3
~(S)
w~th epIB=\.d., d.e~·Il'~d.+:O(' b:\-:llJlb~
~Cx)'1)-:()tIO) if \)1.\41/2..1
a.nd..e)(~ed
/
~(S)
'. R"3. ~ R 3 li. ?c:hd"~.) worth {{~CA\) -:::t{~(~(AJJ, ~"!(A~)":: ~ 3(t{ Uh)\
().V\d.
-f{::L(
FIGURE 3
\N 'ne..~e
S
-= d A \ U 2J A ~
.
- 170 -
J. Guckenhetmer
FIGURE
4
_ 171 -
J. Guckenheun er
F\GUR'E: 5
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE MATEMATICO ESTIVO (C .I.M.E.)
D. KINDERLEHRER
THE ANALYTICITY OF THE COINCIDENCE SET IN VARIATIONAL INEQUALITIES
Corso
tenuto
a
Varenna
dal
24
ag osto
al
2
settembre
1972
- 175 -
D. Kinderlehrer
These lectures are about a variational problem for minimal surfaces which describes, from an intuitive po:l.nt of view, how a minimal sur:face
Our scope is the discovery of the geometric and
leaves an obstacle.
analytic foundations of the problem, both antique and modern, required for its solution.
oc t Set
First ve describe the problem.
Let us fix
2 R strictly convex with smooth boundary
2 E C (n )
strictly concave satisfying
lK= (v : v lipschitz Ln.
n; v ~.
in
~ t >0, t
0, v =0 on
an}
and consider
the Problem 1. convex,
To find
u ElK: area u
= min
(area v} v ElK u,v E lK implies that u + t(v -u) ElK, 0 ~ t
Since -:lK is ~l,
and we may
restate the problem as the variational inequality Problem 1. The existence of such a
u
has been demonstrated by H. Levy and
G. Stampacchia ([ ll}) and by M. Giaquinta and L. Pepe «(4}) who have found, :!n fact,
that
Our object here is to stUdy the solution u near the obstacle
t,
which is the reason for our selection of a particularly simple geometric situation.
Here is a list of the objects we may stUdy
- 176 -
D. Kinderlehrer
2 1= (z E R :u(z) =VCz>1 aI
set of coincidence
its boundary
r = (xl'~'X3) : x3 =u(z), z =:l<J. +i~ E aI}, curve of separation. It is already known that (cf. [5], [6])
' r is a Jordan curve and
(1)
([7]):
We shall discuss a new result Theorem 1.
If
,
i s analytic and strictly concave, then
r is an
analytic Jordan curve (as a function of its arc length parameter). The first item of information we collect about the problem is that since u E
Cl(O)
and
u-
t ~0
in 0,
in I. Let us observe now that some condition about the mean curvature of ,
is necessary to conclude anytrdng at all about 01 • For suppose that
D·V
D. . J
.1
J1 + \Dv1 2
Now Dju =Djv
in
= 0 in
Bn I
Be 0,
implies that
B
a ball,
B
n Ii ¢
a..e ,
Djku =Dj k,
in
Bn I •
Hence D. J
Hence, since equa t i on in
Dju
.11 + IDul~
= 0
u E H2 , Q(0) (0 - I) U (B n I )
a.e ,
u
'in
(0-1) U (B
n
I)
is a solution of the minimal surface Wit! l
U
= Xi
i n B n I.
Hen ce
u
=v
in
- 177 -
D . Kinderlehrer
B,
independently of aI n B,
nature of the supposed
01
that the mean curvature of
in particular, independently of the
We shall see that it is necessary to know ,
is not zero.
How does one shqw that a curve is analytic?
One seeks to extend a
conformal representation of the minimal surface
Let us -briefly review this old concept.
common tangent plane to
0 E r.
Now choose a neighborhood
r'
connected subarc
c
r,
0 E r'
X:G ... UC S,
.
o
and X(t) E r,
X2 -= X2 t t2 l
and X • X =0 t t 2 l
is the
Uc S whose boundary contains a
Then there exists a 1 : I mapping
G={ltl <1,
X E C(G)
6X =0
we choose
such that x = 0 3 S and the obstacle surface
coordinates with origin at
at
Given 0 E r,
Imt>O}
-l
and
X(O) =0
(conformal)
(minimal)
Two dimensional (smooth) surfaces always have conformal representations (cf. [1], [2]) but in general 2 tiX. =2Xt Hv, 1
\I
=normal and
H=mean curvature.
Were we able to extend harmonically the coordinate functions into a neighborhood of t =0,
then
X. (t) J
- 178 -
D. Kinderlehrer
t ~ X(t)
t
real
would be an analytic representation of a part of the story of this extension.
r
We want to recount X (t)
Replace the harmonics
j
by the
holomorphic functions
* fj(t) =Xj(t) +iXj(t) x.(t) ,
t E G,
X* j harmonic conjugate to
l~j ~J
'J
and consider the Problem 2.
~.(t) E C(G). holomorphic in
To find
J
~.(t) =r:m J
The existence of such functions It
I
It I < s,
Imt=O,
J
(epj}
is defined by
f .(t) J
t
=
· (t )
Imt ~ 0,
~
Imt ~ 0,
J J
How can we find the
(epj}?
,>0.
for some
implies that
by the Schwarz Reflection Principle.
G such that
f
j
are analytic in
The extension, of course,
It I < E It I < E This is an appropriate time to discuss
the history of this problem, which began with a paper by H. Lewy and
G.
Stampacchia
([10]).
They considered the
under the assumptions i mp03ed at the begi nning of t his discussion. showed
They
- 179 -
D. Kinderlehrer
Theorem 2.
If ,
Let
I
be the coincidence set of the solution of Problem 3.
is strictly concave and analytic, then
is an analytic Jordan
31
~.
We present a short proof 'of this theorem to expose the underlying concept. Proof:
Assume that Since
is a Jordan curve, known by ([ 5]).
01
au =0 in
0
-I , 'and
u E cl(O) ,
is continuous in 0
and analytic in 0 - I .
F(z,~) = Dlt - iD2t
is an analytic function of
the !'unction
The function z
and ~ and may be
extended to an analytic fUI\ction of the complex variables neighborhood
£I z - zOI
I~ -, I < til
< 6,
translate the fact that Du =Dt
on 01
for a fixed
ZO
(z,e) E 31.
in a We
into the formula ,
Now let !p(t) E C(G) be a conformal mapping of G onto a neighborhood cp(G) CO-l
such that Ijl(O)=zo and !pet) E 01
It is known that !pet) E C(G)
a~ for
t
F(Z,,), (z
0 -0 ,Z )
=~
b,y a theorem of Caratheodory
At(zo) <0 ,
is strictly concave, we "may solve the equation h(~(t» = F(cp(t),!p*(t» cp * (0) := -0 z
for
-l
([3]). Since
- 1 SO -
D. Kinderlehrer
cp * (t )
for a function cp * (t)
~breover,
hence of t ,
in
continuous in a neighborhood
is an analytic function of cp(t) and ( It I < e] I I G.
For
t
is sufficiently small and real and
It I small,
cp(tz
So we may conclude that and, accordingly,
and
is any numbar such that
h(cp(t» =F(cp(t),Cl) ,
then Cl = cp*(t)
satisfies this relation in view of
--' cp(t) = cp* (t) for It I small and t
re~l
cp may be extended by the formula
z
cp( t.) Imt 0 cp(t) = _ { cp*(t;) Imt~O
.
It
I <&
It
I <£
The mapping t ... cp(t), -s
h(cp(t»,
There is also a uniqueness statement
in the implicit function theorem, that is, if Cl ICl •.;0\
I It I < &1 n G
for some
lI.
>0
•
is an analytic parameterization 'of
p
01
The idea of using an implicit function theorem, however, cannot be applied to the proof of Theorem 1. Proposition.
It is impossible to find the solution to Problem 2 by means
of an implicit function theorem. Proof:
and
Suppose, for contradiction, that there exist
h.(t) J
analytic in G and continuous in
G, such that
-
18 1 -
D. Kinderlehrer
We re call that analyti c f unctions i n a domain are anal yt i call y dependent
~.(h.(t) ,h. (t)).=O,
J
and hencE
~
n (5), replacing
assume tha
t E G,
. "k
h. (t ) =0.
if necessary, we may
Fj
Hence
J
~ ~ 1 o'k
1~i,j,k~3
d\ _ 0
-l
dt l -
1
~j ~3
which implies that dXl dt dX2 dt
0 =
~
0
dt
of .
Now i f det(af)';'O, .k
t -. X(t),
then
0
dX .
df = 0, 1
if
det(~) = 0 ,
r elationship
=t l
< 1 • Hence the mapping
-1 < t < 1 ,
is constant and not at all an arc of
of .
-1 < t
then the functions
r.
This is a contradiction. But
~.
J
cannot be determined by the
- 182 -
D. Kinderlehrer
Let us remark that even if we allow
we still obtain a contradiction. 0= Hence, since entire
IXt I l
f
=
IXt I 2
to be mapped onto a point,
For by the isothermal relations,
implies that
are analytic in
j
-1
G,
f~(t) =0, t 'J
fj(t) =c
j
real.
a constant, and the
S surface would be a poiqt.
The correct way to approach Problem 2 is to consider a system of differential equations
Cll (0) = j
fjTc5T
This is the idea of Hans Levy who used it to study the behavior of minimal surfaces with pres cribed and free boundaries ([ 8], [9]).
Levy's idea will constrain us to relate the mean curvature of reguhrity of
u
to the system of equatd.ons.,
(6.1)
Solve the system (and find it!)
(6.2)
Show that
Cll/t)
= fj(t)
,
;
For us and the
The process has two parts
-r c e ci
The derivatives of
f. will occur in the system in a manner which J does not affect the existence of the solution'but which impedes its uniqueness unless the
f.
are absolutely continuous.
J
gation includes proving that Theorem 4.
* E C3 (0)
Let
in particular,
r
is a
l C
r
is rectifiable.
be strictly concave. ~.
Hence this investi·
- 1 83 -
D. Kinq.erlehrer
The proof of this theorem is rather difficult and will be omitted. Now we utilize the geometric conditions to establish an acceptable system of equations.
The only
g~ometric
is tangent to the obstacle N·X
where
t
l
= N·X
M={(X)., X2'~)
t
= 0,
2
informatiUl we actually know is that
M along
r.
That is, by t3),
N =(-D , , -D ,
2
l o
S
0
'
1),
t
real
: X.3::' 0 (X).;X2)} near, 0 E r . Hence, writing
• . =D., , J J 0
Given the existence of ~. E Cl(Q) J
~~(t)::r:m, J
J
-i
ce cr ,
(8)
solving Problem 2 it is clear that
hence -1
•
The second relation is the minimal surface relation, namely, ', ( )2 =X 2 - X2 -2iX . t 1 . Xt 2 =0 , t1 t2
1: f. t J
.3
1: 1
~~(t)2 J
so that
=0
To find a third equation, we would like to differentiate (7), writing In this way we would obtain an equation involving the derivatives of
(cp j l
and the second derivatives of
to'
whi ch, hopefully, would imply a system which depends on the mean curvature of
M.
So at this point, we introduce the three functions
- 184 -
D . Kinderlehrer
z
=xl (t.)
+i ~ (t)
(10)
where
U
o
(X lX 2)
is a nonpar-araet.r-Ic representation of'
functions derive from the technique of Haar-Rado ([ 12) Variation of the independent Variable.
S
near
O. These
which is called
This technique applied to the
functional
A(u)
=f
(1 +.11 + IDUl
2
o
)clx:Ld~
yields two exact differentials
dSl
= (1
1 +
+ (Dl u)2 W
)dJ). +
DIU D 2u d S2 = . W dJ). + (1
+
D UD l 2u
-w-
~
1 +(D u)2 W2 )~
z
The function
'(z)
=J(d~l+ id s2) a
may be einployed as a new independent
variable and in our case it provides a conformal representation of the
Hence
functions which satisfy
(11)
t EG
g. (t) are holomorphic. J
- 185 -
D. Kinderlehrer
By
(2) and Theorem 3,
gj
are lipschitz in
G
By (11), we may consider
the relation
Wh~Cl1,
differentiated, is
Since the system (8), (9), (12) depends nonlinearly on ~~ , we mOdify' i t somewhat.
The relations (8), (9) imply that
(jl~ _
~so that
Jt
>
-'1"2
° for
.t i)l +,~ 1
.
+.~
t >0.
+.;
where we choose a branch of ,;-
In this formula we choose the + sign
implying that r
ep2 1m -, > (jll
(I)
° for
Itj, lepll, lep2 1 small.
Hence in (12), the left hand side
(LHS)
becomes
so that
where
Ho
is the mean curvature of M at
function Fl (t,(jll,(jl2,(jl)
analytic for
0
Hence there exists a
t E G and JI~j-P small so that
~~ =Fl ( t ,'Pl , :P2 '~3 ) ' FlCa,a,a,o)
=
I~ (-L *.ihgjf~ +2(gJ-'lgl-V2~ o
- 186 -
D. Kinderlehrer
Similarly, there exist F2 and F which have the same dependence on 3 Mean curvature of M. The system
th ~
~j(t) = Fj(t'~1'~2'~3) ~.(O) J
=~ =0 J
has a unique solution which is ana,lytic in Gn{ltl<e}
and continuous
in 'On (It I <&1- Moreover, if (~(t),~(t),h3(t» is any threetuple . of Cl functions which satisfies (14) for -e
This uniqueness statement follows in a simple way. (f
l(t),f2(t),f3(t»
fi(t)
(14) i f Im - -
fi(t)
is a solution of (8), (9), (12) and hence also solves for' It I small (er. (12».
>0
using (11) • . Hence · cp.(t) =f.(t) J
J
for
-c
We can check this This completes the
"demonstration ll of the solution to Problem '2. (*)
Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa and University of ~~nnesota Minneapolis, MN 55455
(*)
J
On the other hand
This research was partially supported by the C.N.R. of Italy and contract AFOSR 71-2098.
- 187 -
D. Kinderlehrer
1.
Lars Ahlfors, Lectures on quasiconformal mappings, Van Nostrand Princeton, N.J., 1966.
2.
L. Bers; F. John, M: Schecter, Iartial Differential Equations, Interscience, New York, 1962.
3·
C. Caratheodory, Conformal Representation, Cambridge University Press, London, 1932. M. Giaquinta and L. Pepe, Esistenza e regolarita per il oroblema del1'area minima con ostacoli ~n n variabili, Annali S.N.S. Piss (XXV. II) 1971, 481-506.
5· D. Kinderlehrer, The coincidence set of solutions of certain
variational inequalities, Arch. Rat. ~ch. and Anal. (40.]) 1971, 231-250.
6. 7.
~~_, The regularity of the solution to a certain variational inequality, Proc , Syinp. Pure and Appl. Math. vol. 23, AMS, Providence, RI. _______, How a minimal surface leaves an obstacle, to appear
~~
B. Hans Lewy, On the boundary behavior of minimal surfaces, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. (37) 1951, 103-110.
9.
On minimal ·surfaces with partly free boundary, C.P.A.M. 4, 1951, 1-13.
_~~_,
10. H. Lewy and G. Stampacchia, On the regularity of the solution to a variational ineguality,C.P.A.M. (22) 1969, 153-188. 11.
, On the existence and smoothness of sQlutions of some noncoercive varia:"~nal inequalities, ftIch. Rat. Mech. and Anal. (41.4) 1971, 141-253.
12 T. Rado, On the problem of Plateau, Ergebnisse der 1'.9:thematik, -Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1933.
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE MATENIATICO ESTIVO (C .I.M.E.)
M. MIRANDA
BOUNDARIES OF CACCIOPPOLI SETS IN THE CALCULUS OF VARIATIONS
Corso
tenuto
a
Varenna
dal
24
agosto
al
2
settembre
1972
BOUNDARIES OF CACCIOPPOLI SETS IN THE CALCULUS
O~
VARLATIONS by Mario Miranda (Universi ty of Ferrara)
These lectures concern the minimal surface operator
n
D . f(x)
2:=
i:;: 1
where
D.
1
.
1
VI
+
IDf(x) 12
D.
1
IDf(x)
n
/2
I::
i:;: 1
I D.1 f(x)
/2
More precisely we will discuss : 1. The Dirichlet problem for the minimal surface equation in bounded
domains, i. e. the . problem of proving the e xistence of a functi-
on
analytic in a bounded open set
f
n
~
(1)
i:;: 1
n ,
verifying th e equation
D .f(x) D.
and continuous in
1
VI + n
1
I Df(x) I 2
0,
x
E n
with prescribed continuous boundary values on
dn . This problem has a solution if the boundary of
~
n
has
non
negative inner mean curvature at all its points. This condition is also necessary in a sense precised by Finn. 2. The Dirichlet problem for the minimal surface equation with a second member, i. e. the problem of proving the existence of a function
- 192 -
M. Miranda
f
satisfying
n
L
(2)
=1
i
A(x, f(x)),
D 1. --;===:=::=;::=-
and continuous in
IT
x
E
n
with prescribed continuous boundary values on
dn. This problem has not yet been completely solved . Partial results have been proved by Serrin, following a quite classical approach, and by Massari using De Giorgi's theory of "boundaries" . In the problem 1.
f(x) where
'P
and
'Y
~
2.
the extra condition
x
(x) ,
E
n
is a fixed function , can be accepted.
3 . The equilibrium surface of a liquid in a capillary tube. The
equation verified by the function
L
i =1
heigth of the liquid, is
D.f(x)
n
(3)
f,
D.
1
VI +
1
/Df(x)
I
f(x) , 2
n in this case is the section of the tube. Certainly this equation is a special case of (2), but rity problem is not a Dirichlet problem, since scribed values on
dn .
f
the capilla-
does not have pre-
The variational principle for this case imp1.ies
a bouncary condition for the normal derivative of ach is necessary for proolem
3
f . A separate appro-
and it can be proved that if the tu-
be does not have narrow angles then the equilibrium surface exists, is unique and analytic in
n.
Its boundary behavior has not yet been investiga -
- 193 -
M . Miranda
ted . The solutions of these problems are quite similar. An existence result can be proved directly and easily. The second step then is to prove the . regularity of the solution at ulterior po ints and the final problem is to investigate the bounrfary behavior of the solution. The
Sf cond
step
i s the most difficult . For the problems we have presented at rve the regularity problem can be reduced to the proof of the r-egular r y of "boundaries of sets" verifying a variational property. The first
~
¥gula r it y re-
sult for "boundaries of sets" was proved by De Giorgi in 1961, who considered the case of "boundaries of sets minimizing area". The result we present here is an extension of De Giorgi's result to the case of "boundaries of sets"
minimizing a functional given by the "area plus
something" . We will explain right now which boundaries of sets will be cons idered as generalized hypersurfaces. In 1954 De Giorgi studied the boundaries of Borel sets
n E C R,
whose characteristic functions have first derivatives wh ich are measures. This means that there exist on
such that
(4)
D . g(x)dx 1
-i
n
Radon measures
l' ...
,lLn
.z(x )dj1- i '
Rn
If (4)
is true then it is easy to see that
spt
)L i c a E
, so
we can write
(5)
f
D i g(x)dx
=-
E
In other words for the sets
E
considered by De Giorgi a gene-
ralized Green ' formula is valid. It must be said that De Giorgi's problem in 1954 was exactly the extension of the classical Green formula .
- 194 -
M. Miranaa
Only later De Giorgi applied his boundaries to the study of Plateau's problem. It must also be said that in 1952 Caccioppoli gave the same extension of the Green formula, by a completely different approach. For this reason we will call Caccioppoli sets those sets verifying (4).
In his work of 1954 De Giorgi differentiated the vector measure
( P.l' fl'2""
)Jon)
with respect to its total variation
Iy (x) I = 1
I)A-I - a. e.
Y (x)
tain the existence of a vector
1JA-1,
to ob-
satisfying
1fA'1- a.e.
,
that is
(6)
y (x) = lim
p.O
B (x)
e
{
Y E R
n
Iy
,
- ,x
I
<
P1
De Giorgi could prove t hat at the poi.nts
y (x)
x
~
i:l E
where
exists and has modulus equal to 1 a ta.igent hyperplane to
exists, in a generalized
(jlitE
sense, and the set
dE
of such points,
which he called the reduced boundary., has the property that
(7)
where
H
n-
1
is the Hausdorff
(n-l}-measure. In other words (5) can
be writen
(8)
JJ·E
g(x)
Y .(x)dH 1
n-
i :
- 195 -
M. Miranda which has the appearance of.the claestcal .Green formula.. with the reduced boundary in the place of the total boundary. As we have introduced the Caccioppoli subsets of n speak of Cacciopp01li subsets of an open set 0 C R that res
(9)
E C IT' is a Caccioppoli subset of
JA'1' . •. f'n
f
Dig(x)dx
on:O
=-
E
f
0
R
n,
we can
We will say
if there exist
n
measu-
such that
g(x)d
r,
0
De Giorgi's results about the reduced boundary are still valid for the case of Caccioppoli subsets of an open set. Following De Giorgi we will say that a Caccioppcili subset ry in
0
E
of
0
has minimal bounda-
if
inf { H n_ 1(
il L n oi.
Leo, where
L L:::. E c c 0
containing the
means that there exists a compact set
(L-E) U (E-L).
K c 0
For the minimal boundaries of Cacciop-
poli sets the following regularity result was proved by De Giorgi. THEOREM 1 : If a Caccioppoli set minimal boundary in nifold of dimension ( 11)
H
0
n-1
n-1
E c 0 c R
n
(n ~ 2)
has a
then its reduced boundary is an analytic maand
L( ~ E
-
d* E)
n o]
= 0
The conclusion (11) has been recently im p r ov ed by Federer. Federer's result is that
- 196 -
M. ·Mi r a n da
'V
o,
(12)
s >n - 8,
s
Federer's conclusion also contains the fact that up to
Simons . Born
bieri, De Giorgi and Giusti have proved that starting with
n
n
R
n = 7
This fact had been proved by Fleming, Almgren and
( d E - d· E)
E
n
= °8,
can be non-empty.
Massari has cons idered the boundaries of Caccioppoli sets verifying the
H _ ( n 1
(13)
+
J
d-E
n n) +
fnnE
A(x);dx = in! {H _ ( n 1
Len,
A(x)dx
L L::.. E cc n}
< +
n n)
+
00
nnL A
where
is an integrable function in
Gior~i-Federer's
n . Massari's extension of
tisfies (13) and if C1,o(
De
result is the
THEOREM 2 : If a Caccioppoli set a
d*L
A €
LP(n)
with
-manifold of dimension
p
E c n c R
>
n
n
a-E
then
n-1, for some
01. >
0,
sa-
nn
is
and (12)
is valid. The proof of Massari's result requires some lemmas. LBMMA 1: sfies (13) with
f\
<
f
If a Caccioppoli set
A € L 1(n)
2 < d ist(O,
d
n)
and
0 E n,
E c ncR
n
,
n
~
then for almost all
2,
sati-
- 197 -
M. Miranda
(14)
{f;-n Hn_ 1( c'l'fEnBp2)-
+ (n-1)! P2
(t -n
PI
J
~~ ;.nHn_l( d'fEnBpl)
I Alx) I dx)
+
Bt
PROOF. The proof of the lemma 1 is a calculation. In this calculation we set
E
will
operate over the characteristic fuu.tion
If' E
of the
as if it were a C 1 function. Naturally we do this for sake of
simplicity. To be correct we should make approximations. which could 1 be very cumber-soma , Considering lfE as if it were a C function it is convenient to write
ID
tp..,. (x) I dx
. instead of
" "
dHn _1
I ,l"E '
1:1:
"
Y(x)
The starting point of our calculation is the comparison of with the Caccioppoli set
(15)
L
t,
0 < t < dist (0, .
a n),
defined by '
E
.- 198 -
M. Miranda
From (13) ,
I D If L
t
(x)
I dx .
+
.
(16)
~
(17)
f
B
ID t
If. L
(x)
I
dx
+
t
f
B
I A(x) I
dx
.
t
In as much as
(18)
= _t_ I D If
Ixl
E
(~t) I \ 'I _ I x • ~ (x) I 2 I x I -2 Ixl V · .
Integrating (18) yields
Combining (19) and (17) and using the inequality it follows that
VI - E
2
~1-
€: '
- 199 -
M. Miranda
Now multiplying by
t -n(n_l), rear-r-anging terms and remembering
that
we obtain that
if
IDIfE(x)1 Ix. y(x)1
aBt
(21 )
(
d~ {,I-n J B
t
I D'f'Elxll
2
Ix l-n- 1 dH n_ 1
dx }
+
.
After integration over
In-I) , -n
~
f
B
(
Pr f
2)
I Alx) I t
'we see that
dx
•
- 200 -
M.
Miranda
we conclude (14), with the notations introduced at the beginning of the demonstration. At this point we want to modify the inequality (14). We first ren 1 mark that if g is a C function then the function x Ix I- g(x I x I -1) n is diver-gence free in R - {O} . The divergence theorem applied to the function If' E (x) . x Ix I-n g(x I x ,-1) implies that
(24)
f
DIfE(x))lxl-
(x
n
g(x
Ixl- 1 )dx
~
=f
n 1
a~
Applying the i de ntit y (24) twice and substracting the two new inequaltttes we get
(25) =
f
g(x) [
P2 x)
-
'PE(
9 IX) ]
=1
[x]
dH
n-
1 .
From (25) by taking the supremum of the right hand side over the g
verifying
(26)1 .
I g(x) I
I ~E( f
[x I = 1
~ 1,
we obtain
x 2 ) - lfE( fIX)
I dH n_ 1
n_ 1
- 201 -
M. Miranda Let us notice now that from the Green formula wOe get
D If> (x) dx E
(27)
= (
)~m
x "x 1-1
f E(x)dHn_ 1
'
t
and also, by changing variables, 1 n t -
(28)
J
Dtf (x)dx
B
E
t
=/
[x I = 1
'fE(tX)dHn _ 1·
Using (26) , (28) and (14) we d iscover the new inequality
t,_J
whi ch can be written, by using the other notations , in the form
n
(30)
~ +
'1
(x) dBn-l
] t"P,
Btn ~* E
Ixl '-
p/2
6~En(B
In-II
J
PI
~
t =P2 n
dBn _1 •
-B
It-
PI
n
{ [t
1
)
lIAIXI ! B
t
-
n
Bn_ 1 I
dx)
dt
~. E A Btl]
J
t
=9 2 +
t
= P1
- 202 -
M.
Another modification "can be" obtaiu.ed by considering
Miranda
t
Ie term
(31)
dH
and, with an integration by parts, we obtain
j
B
1 n I x 1 - 1D'I' Elxll
dx = [
f
1 -n t i D fE(x) B
p 2-B P 1
I dx
J
n-
1) dt,
t= P2
t
=P
1
t
(32)
dx) dt .
R emembering 03) and comparing
E
E UB
with the set
easily see that
~
nW ,n -l n
+
f
IAlx11 dx •
Bt
(34)
dx) dt
.
we
+
- 203 -
M . - Miranaa The for-mulae (34) and (29) provide us a new for-mula, which will be very useful, in the sequel. An interesting consequence of Lemma I can be obtained when
o c d-E n n .
In this case, from De Giorgi's results about the r eda-
ced boundary,
lim
(35)
p~o
PI
Letting
o( p1-n
tend to
J B
0
f~t-n 11
in (29) we obtain
ID 'fElxl[ dx - "n-l +(n-l)
0
p
B
Alx)
I dx)
dt .
t
The formula (36) can be extended to the case where
0 E
V* E n n
by an approximation argument . We take this opportunity to remark that
dl/fE
the set
means that id where t ion,
~
E
n f2
is the support in
x E
n -
is equal to
if necessary, of
E
il'E 1
n of the gradient of
If E
. This
then there exists a neighborhood of or
0
x
almost everywhere . By a modif'ica-
in a set of measure zero we can suppose that
(37)
Henceforth we will assume that Caccioppoli sets satisfy (37). Therefore we can state the LEMMA 2 : If
E
is a - Caccioppoli subset of
the condition (13) and if
f <
dist (0,
0 E
dEn n,
n
nCR , n;;: 2,
then (36)
verlfying
is valid for any
d n) .
In the relations (29) and (36) the function vature (sum of the principal curvatures) of
E
A
which is the cur-
in a generalized sense,
appears in the form of an integral of the following type
- 204 -
M. Miranda
This integral can be easily estimated if can also be easily estimated if
A E L p(n)
A
is bounded, but it P > n,
with
by using
the Halder inequality
(38)
Therefore 1 1--
wn P
II All
p
L (0)
f
1-~
P
The relation (39) implies that
JPit f
IAI.II
-ri
o
tends uniformly to
0
B
f
as
dx) dt
t
tends to
O.
With additional technical but non trivial calculations, the inequa lities just proved may be employed to demonstrate
IA(x)
(40)
with
l~
r
H
(Bo<.rn
n_ 1
P<
and
E
~. E) -I 2
,
r }B n a-E
y (x) dH n_ 1
r
1~ E~ n-1 ~ G"' (n,
r ' 0< ) P
n-1 ,
- 205 -
M . Miranda then
(41)
Hn_1
-I
(B~r n a'E)
i"
(x)
dHn_ 1
a-E
atp n
B
-I y;;: E( '" p <;
)n-1
An oQservation about this lemma is that it can be 'a pplie d repeatedly. In other words the conclusion we can obtain from 'the hypothesis of De Giorgi Lemma, is the (x) dH _ n 1
n d-E
I~V;k
E (0( k
P ) n-l
~
(42) "'kEN A consequence of De Giorgi's Lemma is the LEMMA 3 xEd E
I A(y) I
If
nn ~
E
has generalized curvature
and there exist
'{; ,
yEn
p,
E > 0,
0(: 0
A(x)
<
and if (40) is valid, thep
0(
in , n,
< 1,
x f. d·E
if BU'llh that
nn
PROOF . We can assume that
p<
, (43)
2(n-l)
t
W
n
If (43) were not valid for the given
f
we could choose a
k
such that
and by the application of (42) the hypothesis of, the Lemma 3 be valid for
01.. k P
prove the existence of
Let us assume then that
~
would
verifies (43) . To
,
- 206 -
M. Miranda
dx) -1 }
,
we consider first the sequence of quotients
Writing, for simplicity,
and
ID~E I
that for
B
C
C
(B p )
D tf
instead of
E
(B p)
r
B
f
instead of
D lfE(x)dx
B p(x)
and observing
1D
p (x)
c n
D fE (C)
1DlfE
I (C)
-
ID
ID
I DtpE I (C) we obtain
I
D lD T
E
(B
d... n+k p
ID
(45)
k-1
~2
L
j=O
)
pl
DtfE(B IDlfE
ri..
h
I (B
P h
d...
)
P
I D lf E I (B f o(h+k:'j-1) I Dlf E I
From (42) and (36) we obtain
)
-
I D lfJE
(B j'o(h+k- j)
(B
P o(h+k-j-1) I
- 207 -
M . Miranda
D w(B
lE
po(. h)
(46L k-1
.::;:2
L
j=O
2
-1
f
w _
n 1
n-1· (n-1)(h+k-j)
at.
So the sequence is a Cauchy sequence . With a similar calculation we obtain
2 t
(47)
which tends to zero, as
h
~
eX h/2
co
Hence the lim h-+co exists and is a vector of modulus equal to it can be proved that the limit exists as
f
1 . By using again
to .
(44)
We consider the
lemma proved. We remark that the proof of the lemma contains also
- 208 -
M. Miranda
(48)
valid for any integer
h
f
if
verifies the extra condition (43).
(Y~E
We can prove now that dimension
is a
C
1
, o( .
-manifold of
n-l. We will obtain this result as a consequence of the
LEMMA
4 :
there exists a
J
nB E nB
E
in
nn
E
If
>
(x)
verifies the hypothesis of Lemma 3, then
such that
0
=
nB
E
(x)
and
(x)
is holder continuous
(x) .
PROOF . Let us remark first that
J
>
0
can be determined
by the property (49)
VY
~
f
EO ~ E
n-l
y
n BJ
3'p y
(x)
: 0
<
Py ~
E
2
and
a-' (n, '( , eX ).
This implies, because of Lemma 3, the first conclusion. Applying (48) and (46) and by an easy calculation we obtain
(50)
I)'(y)-
v y,
· Y (E ) I
z
E
cl
~ E
C(x,o< ,E,'{ ,p)
nB
(x) (1 -
0( )
po(
Iy-z 1
1 4 / ,
2 '-2 n
This completes the proof of Lemma 4 . Let us remark that any point of
verifies t h e hypothe -
_ 209 -
M . Miranda
sis of the Lemmas 3 and 4 . The proof of the first conclusion of De Giorgi's theorem is so complete. About the second conclusion, say the estimate of the singular set, we know (51).
IDIf'EI
[<JEE>
This implies that for any
(d E
containing
-
d*E}nnJ= o .
d1(; E) n n
0
tuer-e exists an open set
B
We can also find a family of balls and
(dE -
d~E) nne
I D
and satisfying
UBi:: ~ Pi
p· 1. (y 1.)
with
y. € 1
rE
E s .-,
) <
a
·We can assume, from
a
i
classical property of the spaces
R
n
, that any
k(n} + 1 of them
have
empty intersections . We obtain
(52)
~
IDIfEI (B
1
. (Yi}}~k(n)
f
I ( fE
1D
1
n-l
l' i
(53)
Wn
)
< k(n} E,
_l
which imply (54)
, Li
f
n-l i
<
-1
(2k(n) w _ € n l}
However, the existence for any {
B
.}}. p i(vl l
verifying H _
n l
E> 0
of the covering
(54), means that [( dE -
d·
E)
n oJ
o.
We want to apply now the regularity result for boundaries to solve the Dirichlet
problem for the minimal surface equation on bounded
- 210 -
M . Miranda
domains of
R
n.
We will do this in three steps.
Step 1 . We prove the existence of the solution' for the variational problem
associated with the Dirichlet problem.
Step 2
We prove the interior r-egulai-ityof the solution by using
the regularity theorem for minimal boundaries and a priori estimate for the gradient of the solutions of the minimal surface equation. Step 3 • We prove that the solution of the variational problem take the prescribed boundarv
VA
lues .
nC
. The variationa., J r n' .J.em . We assume
an
pen and
R
to be lipschitz . We fix a function
n
to be bounded, o-
g E L l(
d 0)
and
consider the functional
1 VI
/I. (f) =
+
I Df(x) I
2
dx + (
n
The definition of accepting
(55)
1V1
+ co
1\
Jdn
If
- g
I dHn _ 1
can be extended to any function
.
1 f € L (0) ,
as a possible value, by means of
+ IOf(x) I ' dx n
2 L G i (x)~ 1 i= 0
>
'UP{ f"
(fdivG + GOI dx
vx )
The formula (55) has to be considered as a definition of
f. '11 n
+
I Df(x) I ·2
dx
- 211 -
M. Miranda
for
1 f € L (r2),
rivatives in
+
00
but it is an identity in the case where
L 1(r2}. The quantity
in which case we set
f
has first de-
defined by the formula (55') can be
1\ (f) = +
00
•
In the case
in '11
ID'I 2
+
dx
< +
00
there exists (for the references see the paper of Santi) a function T € f (56)
L 1(
~
with the property
(2)
lim
P-n
p-l-O
,
J
I Tf(x)
r2nB
p
- f(y)
I
dy = 0,
H
n-
1-a. e.
on
(X)
. So we can calculate
but since
T
f
is uniquely determined by
f
and . n
we write
instead of
In this way
"(f) is well defined. To prove the existence of the 1 minimum for A. in L (n) we apply direct methods, say we consider 1 a sequence f E L (r2) such that h (57)
lim ho+oo
"(fh)
inf
fA(f}
1:
- 212 -
M.
Miranda
Let us observe that
A (0) = mis n
which implies that the sequence Let us consider a ball ded over
B
B
as a function in
" (f ~~
n
+1
Ig I
on
dH n_ 1 <
and let us assume
L (B)
co
is bounded .
h)
1
+
g
to be exten-: 1
with first derivatives in
L (B)
(this is possible for a result of Gagliardo) . The following identity is ~a" lid
(59)
I'df)
dx -
f
B-n
t
where
V,
={fin n gin B-n
The formula (59) Implfes that the seqoeoee
+
1Dg(x) I'
dx,
fa V, + 1Drh
I'
dx
is bounded, then for a quite classical compacteness result we can assume that
fh
is convergent in
by the definition (55) applied to
(60)
dx
<:
1
L (B).
to some
1\ (f ~ lim in! 1\ (f O)
h-.co
h)
It is easy to check,
B, that
lim inf h-s ee
fB 0 D~
which implies
(61)
fo .
info
f l
1\ (f)
+ I
1
2
dx ,
- 213 -
M . Miranda
so
f
O
1\
(f ) is the minimum for O in n is a consequence of the The regularity of f O n THEOREM 3. If n is a bounded open set of Rand ·1 E L (n) satisfies
then
f
is analytic
0
PROOF
in
(t)
n.
The set
E
is a Caccioppoli subset of - nxR
={
L'11+
(x, x + ) ; x En, x +! < fO(x) } n n 1
with
IDlf~(nxR) =
Let us check now that it has minimal boundary in L
be any other Caccioppoli subset of
and let us define
L
o
x En,
0/
with
Xn + 1 < 'o/(X)}
is defined by
(64)
In this proof results contained in [26J
n x R . Let
L 6 E cc n x R
as
(63)
where
nxR
IDf O 1
are used.
2
dx
-
~
14 -
M. Miranda
The function
1f E L 1 (n)
anu
spt]
0/ -
f
O)
cc
n
. So from
(62) we obtain
1DfL
o
I
(nxR)
(65)
which proves, together with the fact that
E
has minimal boundary in
1DlfL
I
o
(nxR) ~ ID~L
I (nxR)
n xR .
By applying De Giorgi's regularity result for minimal boundaries we know that
C)'*En (n x R)
is an analytic manifold of dimension
n,
and since the tangent plane to its points cannot be vertical as a consequence of the strong maximum principle for elliptic equations, we ob-
n
is analytic in the projection of citE (nxR). This proO jection is an open set no en and H (~ - no) = 0 . n Our goal is now to prove that n - . nO = ~ . We check first that
tain that
f
f
locally bounded in n. We prove this by a contraction argument. Let O us assume that there exists a sequence of points x E nO such that h the dist(x d n) ~ > 0 and lim I fO(x I = + 00 • We can h, h) h
p
suppose then that
V h,
(66)
The formula (66) implies that the .balls are disjoint and contained in
{67)
+00=
kEN.
{ B
P
(x
»}
fO(X h h h' n x R. For the formula (36) we obtain
,
- 215 -
M. Miranda which is a contradiction. To conclude the proof of the interior regularity of
fa 'let us fix
H _ ( ?> B n (n - nO)) = 0 . We will show that n I f is analytic in B. From the regularity of f ' we already know, we can O O 2 find a sequence gh of C functions locally bounded in n such that a ball
\(
Bee n
such that
~ce nO 3% ,
I gh I
such that
V h > %.
K= fol K
We solve the Dirichlet problem for the minimal. surface equation in
B with the data gh . We then find a sequence of analytic functions f
in h are locally uniformly bounded in B (see the re-
B. The gradients of the f
h sult of Bombieri -De Giorgi-Miranda) and the functions f This is enough to conclude that f
o from classical results, to' conclude that Weare now at Step 3:
converge to f h O' is locally lipschitz in B and then, f
O
is analytic in
B.
we want to study the boundary behavior
of the solution of the variational problem. For this purpose we will as -
In
sume that i , e. for any
=0
i( x, g(x)
(68)
and
inn
1
[Bx(-
n-I
(69)
L
B
i
0( E
~n
there exist an isometry i of n- I and a ball Be R centered at . 0 a
x E
"V : B
function
has non negative inner mean curvature at each point,
=i C~(B)
~ r-
J ,J )
E B.
D .O<:
ID 'P 12
with
d>o ,
a
lipschitz, such that
J, J)J = { x; (x, . . x n_ I)
1
n",
d?'I ' . dXn _ I
~
0 ,
1¥(x, .. . x
n_ I)
<
- 216 -
M. Miranda We prove the THEOREM 4
f
If
open and bounded, if
c)n
gEe ( () n)
f
then
O
O
;\ (f)
minimizes
is lipschitz and satisfies
e
C (n)
and
implies that
sume, by contradiction, that for x E n h
and
t <+
is bounded by
x
E () nand
0 E
an
g(O) = 0
with
(0,
sup
on
0)
Ig I
Let
such that
<. +
~
consider a ball
U$
En graphg'
=
s . We f
in
o
there exists
00
B
C
because I f I o n+1 R cente-
prove that (68) and n,
imply that
E, defined at the beginning of the proof of the theorem 3 , has
cc
B.
B. For this purpose let
The relations
(.68),(69)
L
I D If L I
(70)
L n (nxR) [L
(B)
~
ID
tp Lin (nxR)
is a subset of
n (n x R)J
nxR
f
O
(B)
verifying
6. E < < n x R
so from the minimum property of
be a set such that
imply (see the paper of
Miranda in Rend. Sem. Mat. Padova 1971) that
the set
(68), (69), if
lim h
We cap. assume
00
minimal boundary in L 6. E
is
o d n
(69), together with the minimum property of the set
n
with
0 <
red at
if
fig .
PROOF . We have to check that given x -----. x h
1 L (n) ,
is
we obtain
- 217 -
M. Miranda
J
ID~
(71)
~
(nxR)
L n (nxR)
ID
tp I
The formulae
(73)
I DtfL I
(B) ~
ID~E
(B) L n (nxR)
(70), (72)
c c
I
B ,
(B) .
provide us with
I D tf'E I
I;J L
(B)
We claim now that the point as t h e limit of the points
(nxR)
[L n (nxR)] 6 E
which implies, together with
(72)
I
ID
(0,
r ),
with
L 6 E c c ·B .
which belongs to
~En B
(x
fO(x E dEn (n x R) is a regular h' h)) point . The reason for this 'a r e firs t that . c'J E B stays on one si-
n
0n xR
de of
, which is a lipschitz manifold verifying (68), (69) .
Secondly the point with
~
(0,
r)
is a point of contact for
n x R . We obtain that the
dimension
n
in a neighborhood of
(69) we conclude that
borhood of ce , (xh,fO(x
~ E
and
c\ E
i s an analytic
(0, '[),
,d n x R
dE
nB
manifold of
and so using again (68), must coincide in a neigh-
(0, '[ ) . But this conclusion is absurd because the sequen h)
edEn(nxR)
-
~nxR
and converges to (0,
[).
- 21 8 -
M.
Miranda
BIBLIOGRAPHY-'
[IJ -
RADO, T .. : The
[2J -
FINN, R.
Plateau Problem, Erg. d . Math. (1933).
: Remarks relevant to minimal surfaces and to sur-
faces of constant mean curvature, J. Analyse Math. [3 J -
SERRIN, J.
14 (1965).
: The problem of Dirichlet for quasilinear ellip-
tic equations w ith many independent variables , Royal Soc. Phil. Trans. 264 (1969). [4J -
JENKINS, H.
- SERRIN, J.
: The Dirichlet problem for the
minimal surface equation in higher dim ensions, J . Reine Ang. Math. 229 (1968). [5J -
MASSARI, U.
: Esistenza e z-ego lar-ita delle ipersuperfici di
curvatura media assegnata,
(to appear in Arch. Rat. Mech.
and Analysis) . [6J -
MIRANDA, M.
: Hypersurfaces with prescribed mean curvatu-
re and boundary, Proc . of the Summer Institute on P . D. E. at Berkeley, . Summer 1971. [7J -
DE GIORGI, E . : Su una teo ria generale della misura (r-1)-dimensionale in uno spazio ad
r
dimensioni, Ann. Mat. Pura
e Appl , 3 6 (1954) . Nuovi teoremi relativi alIe misure (r-1)-
[8J -
- d im en s io n ali in uno spazio ad
r
dimensioni, Ric ; di Matern .
4 (1955) . . [9J -
MIRANDA, M. : Frontiere minimali con ostacoli, Ann . Univ , Ferrara (1971) .
[10J -
GIAQUINTA, M.
- PEPE, L . : Esistenza e r-egol.ar-ita per il
problema dell'area minima con ostacol.i in
n
variabili, Ann.
S. N. S . Pisa (1971) . [l1J -
MIRANDA, M. : Un teorema di es istenza e unicrta per il probl ema dell'area minima in (1965) .
n
variabili, Ann . S .N .S . Pis a
- 219 -
M. Miranda [12J -
LEWY, H.
- STAMPACCHIA,. G . : On existence and smooth-
ness of solutions of some non-coercive variational inequalities, Arch. Rat . Mech. Analysis, (1971). [13J -
EMMER, M. : Esistenza, unicita e r-ego lar-ita delle superfic!. di equilibrio nei capillari, Ann. Univ , Ferrara (to appear).
[14J -
DE GIORGI, E . : Complementi alla teoria della misura n-l dimensionale nella spazio euclideo a
n
dimensioni, Sern ,
Mat . S . N. S . Pisa (1960-61). : Frontiere orientate di misura minima, Sem ,
[15J -
Mat. S. N. S. Pisa (1960-61).
D6J
-
FEDERER, H.
: The stngular sets of area minimizing . .... ,
Bull. Am . Math. Soc . 76 (1970) . [17J -
FLEMING, W. H.
: On the oriented Plateau problem, Rend.
Circ. Mat. Palermo 11 (1962). [18J -
ALMGREN, F. J . jr. : Some interior regularity theorems and an extension of Bernstein's theorem, Ann . of Math . 84 (1966) .
[19J -
SIMONS, J. : Minimal varieties in Riemannian manifolds, Ann. of Math. 88 (1968).
[20J -
BOMBIERI, E.
- DE GIORGI, E . - GIUSTI, E. : Minimal co-
nes and the Bernstein problem, Inv, Math. 7 (1969). [21J -
MIRANDA, M.
:
SuI minimo dell'integrale del gradiente di
una funzione, Ann. S. N. S . Pisa (1965) . : Superfici cartesiane
[22J -
generalizzate ed insiemi
di perimetro finito nei prodotti cartesiani, Ann . S. N. S.
Pisa
(1964) .
[23J -
: Distribuzioni aventi derivate misure, insiemi di per- imetro localmente finito, Ann. S. N . S . Pisa (1964)
[24J -
SANTI, E.
: Sul problema al contorno per l'equazione delle
superfici minime su domini qualunque, Ann . Univ. Ferrara (1971).
- 220 -
M . Miranda
L25J -
GAGLIARDO, E. : Caratterizzazione delle tracce sulla frontiera relative ad alcune funzioni in
n
variabili, Rend. Sem.
Mat. Padova (1957).
[26J
MIRANDA, M.
: Su un principio di massimo forte e .. . , Rend.
Sem. Mat. Padova (1971).
[27J -
BOMBIERI, E . - DE GIORGI, E.
- MIRANDA, M.
: Una mag-
gior-az.ione a priori relativa aIle ipersuperfici minimali non parametriche, Arch. Rat. Mech. Analysis (1969) .
[28J -
ALLARD, W. K.
: On the first variation of a varifold, Ann .
of Math . 95 (1972).
[29J -
FEDERER , H. (1969).
: Geometric measure theory, S pringer- Verlag,
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE MATEMATICO ESTIVO (C.I.M.E.)
L. C. PICCININI
DE GIORGI'S MEASURE AND THIN OBSTACLES
Corso
tenuto
a
Varenna
d al
24
a gos to
al
2
settembre
1972
DE GIORGI'S MEASURE AND THIN OBSTACLES
by LIVID C.PICCININI - PISA
1 • We treat in this lecture a generalized formulation of the problem of minimal surfaces with obstacles . First of all we give some developements of the concept of perimeter ' o f a Borel set of
n• R For this part compare also
Miranda's lectures.
for any open set
Definition 1. Bc;.R
n
n Ac:.R,
for any Bor e L set
we put P(B,A) = sup
(1)
f IdiV g.«x,B)d.,
9 c
[C:(A)ln,[91~lJ
A
~(x,B)
where Band
i s the characteristic function of the set
1 C (A)
denotes the functions of
o
compact support i n If
P (B,K)
< +00
for any
We, 'r e mi n d that if
A, then
for any
~(x,B)
with
A. K CC A (.),
has LocaLLy f inite perimeter on
on
1 C (A)
B
then we sa y that
B
A.
has locally finite perimeter
has measure derivatives on
A
and
K CC A P(B,K)
(
IID~ (x,B) J
I
K
(.) i.e. K is an open set su ch that K is compact and KC A.
- 224 -
L . C. Piccinini Furthermore P(B,A)
where
a*
=~n-1
(a*BnA)
denotes the reduced boundary (see Miranda's
lec~
tures) .Easy conseqpences of the definitions are the following: Proposi tion 1 • are
Bore~
Given an open set
( 2)
and
B
B'
0
P (B,A) = P (B ' ,A) •
If
Proposition 2. of
'f
sets such that
meas [(B /:;. B') (\ A] then
n
A~R,t.
A
and
A'
n R , then for any Bore~ set P (B,A U A')
If
Proposition 3.
Bore~ sets of
are disjoint open subsets
n B ~ R
P (B ,A) +P (B,A' )
A
is an open set of
n R
and
8
1,B 2
are
n
R , then
(3)
In order to use the direct method of the calculus of variations we need a compactness and a semi~continuity theorem: Theorem 4.
Let
A
be an open set of
n. R Let
sequence of Bo r e l: sets such that for any a constant
y(K)
<
+m
for which
KCC A
{B
i}
be a
there exists
- 225 -
L. C. Piccinini P(Bi,K)
hotds for att
y(K)
~
i
Then there is a subsequenae (that we stitt denote a Bor e l: set
suah that for any
B
(4)
lim i-+oo
meas[ (B i
(i.e.
B -+ B i
in
Let
Theorem 5.
A
L
1
B
})
and
K CC A
B) (\ K] = 0 (A) ) be
in
P(B,A)
(5)
i
loc
{B i}
to a Boret set
{B
L <
a sequenae of Boret
sets aonverging
1 (A). Then l oc
lim inf P (B. ,A) . ~
i-+co
Incidentally we remind the following corollary that will be used later Let
Corollary 6.
be an open set of
A
sequenae of Boret sets
n
R • Then for any
{B. } ~
A generalized formulation of the problem of minimal surfaces with obstacles can be the following: n
Given an open set suah that B ;} E o
(7)
E
n A,
B
P (B ,A)
o
n 0
A ~ R "
L
n
~
L
n
.
g1-ven
Boret sets of
E,L
find a Boret set
o
suah that
and
A = ¢
min{P(B,A) ~B B ~ E
B
(1
Borel set of A,
B /l L
n
n, R
A = ¢}
n
R
- 226 -
L. C. Piccinini
The existence of such
B
is ensured by theorems 4 and
o
5. Anyhow it is obvious that this formulation of the problem cannot take into account sets of Lebesgue measure O. Thus the problem is significant only if the obstacles
E
and
L
are
"big". We give a definition of "big" just below. The reason why this problem is not significant when obstacles are "thin" lies in the fact that we take the infimum over a class of sets (Borel sets) which is too large. We introddcenow a ,s ma l l e r class.
G'n
the class
lim p "'0
p -n
B e G'
n
n
belongs to
i f the f o llowing pro p erty h olds :
meas[A(x)
n
o
B]
=>
t B
x
p
we say that F inal ~y
n B~ R
We say t h at a Borel s et
Definition 2.
belongs to the class
B
we say that
B
G"
n
if
belong to the class
if
G
n
G".
n
We call "big" obstac les the sets of the class
GI
n
•
, Now we could state a new problem of minimal surfaces with obstacles in the following way. n
A S;; R , ' g i v e n
Given an open set n R
such that
E
n
L
III
,
E
and
find a set
L, Borel sets of
G o
£
G n
such that
- 227 -
L. C. Piccinini
G
o
~
E () A,
G () L 0
n A=
~
and
PIG ,A) = .min{P(G,A):G e: G , G;;J E() A. G () L(') A = o
n
S?ll
Unfortunately this problem has in general no solution. We can try to state a problem with "penalty'" (as will be shown below) but in order to do so we need a (geometric) measure more suitable then the usual ones for our purpose. This is De Giorgi's measure described below. Definition 3.
Let
we put for any Set
A
n CR.
be an open set, A
any
e: > 0
n
E ~ R
. f{ P (G,A ) + meas(G()A) ) = ~n 0e: ( E,A e: '
(8)
Fo~
-- E
G~
r-:
II
A, G e: G'l n
and o(E,A) ' = lim e:+O
(9)
0
e:
(E,A)
It is easy to prove that
0
(De Giorgi's measure) is actu-
ally an exterior measure, for it is enough to use corollary 6. We can anyhow remark that this measure is somehow · constructed .
following Caratheodory's construction class
G'
n
• In fact, since the
is stable under union and since for any sequence
of Borel sets
(.)
(.)
See Almgren's lectures.
- 228 -
L. C. Piccinihi
(00
P
t' U
i=1
meas r U B inA) l i= 1 Bi ,AJ+ e: )
<
L
[ P(Bi,A)+
i=1
<
m . ease:(Bin A)] ----=:...--
i t (s also
inftp (G,.A) +
meas
l
1nft !
h=1
where
Ye: ,A Y
(G('\
A)
G~ E
e:
G~t )
Ye:,A(Gh)
U
Gh.d
G'
and
h=1
is defined on
e: , A{G)
n A, G e:
n
E (l
A, G h
'"~l
meas (GnA) e:
P{G,A)+
For this measure it is not obvious that Caratheodory's condition is satisfied. Some kind of localization lemma is requi red. Anyhow we can prove the following Theorem 7.
The measure
a
defined by (9) satisfies
Caratheodory's condition, hence the BoreZ set s are
a-meas -
urabZe .
It is obvious also that
a
important relation between
is actually Borel regular. a
and
doe n-1
An
is g iven by · the
following Theorem 8.
There exist two constants
that for any set
n E ~ R
ct{n), c
2{n)
such
_ 229 _
L.
If
Piccinini
1 C , t he n
is con t ai n ed i n a man i fold o f cl as s
E
c.
The last a ssertion, together with s ome simple remark s o n the invariance under Eu clidean transformati ons, allows us t o s t a t e n that !c ( . , R )
i s a geometric me as u r e .
We give now a semi cont i nui t y theore m. T h eo r e m 9.
Le t
b e an op e n se t 0 f
A
B
s e t . Suppose tha t x t E-B = > lim c' 0 {B h}
B h '
is a seq ue n c e
p
t
Gn
Rn ,
I. t
be a Bor el
E
ha s the folZo wi n g p rop er ty :
- n meas (B
n to
conve r ~ i n g
A
c
(x ) ) =
B
in
o • L
1 (A) , whe r e l oc
G'. Th e n n
h.·
c (E - B ; A) .::. min lim [ P {B ,A)+o {E-B ;A ) ]+P(B,A) h h T h eor e ms 4, 5 and 9 are u s e d to prove t h e f ollow i n g exi stenc e theorem
Le t
Th e orem 10 .
n A ~ R
Bo r e l s ets s uch th at
b e a n o pe n s et . E
En L
=
0. Th e n the re e x i st
s u c h th a t P(B ,A )+o (E-B ;A)+o (L
o
0
<
n
an d
B ;A ) < ,,
-
P (B,A )+c (E-B;A)+o (L n B ;A)
are two
L
B
,
,G
n
- 230 -
L. C . Piccinini
for' any
'B
E:
6 • n
Finally we state some relations between the various problems we have considered. Theorem 11.
Let
be as in theor'em10. We put
A,E,L
n, min{P(B,A); B Borel set of R B2EnA, BrlLnA u
min{P (B,A) +0 (E-B;A) +0 (L(\ B;A)
v = inf{P(B,A); B
Then in any aase
~
E, V ~ L,
6 • n
B~ErlA,
A ::.. \l ::.. v , If
If ther'e exist two
u
E:
then
~isjoint
u
=
E,L
open sets
; B
E:
¢}
6 } n
B()LnA = ¢} E:
6', then n
U
an~
A = \l = v ,
V, suah that
v,
REFERENCES F.J :ALMGREN Jr.: These lecture notes E .DE GIORGI-F .COLOMBINI-L.C .PICCININI: "Frontiere orientate di misura minima e questioni collegate" Ediz. Scuola Normale Sup. PISA (1972) M.MIRANDA:
These lecture notes.