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''Extrinsic Geometric Flows'' is an advanced mathematics textbook that overviews
geometric flow In the mathematical field of differential geometry, a geometric flow, also called a geometric evolution equation, is a type of partial differential equation for a geometric object such as a Riemannian metric or an embedding. It is not a term with ...
s, mathematical problems in which a curve or surface moves continuously according to some rule. It focuses on extrinsic flows, in which the rule depends on the embedding of a surface into space, rather than intrinsic flows such as the
Ricci flow In the mathematical fields of differential geometry and geometric analysis, the Ricci flow ( , ), sometimes also referred to as Hamilton's Ricci flow, is a certain partial differential equation for a Riemannian metric. It is often said to be analo ...
that depend on the internal geometry of the surface and can be defined without respect to an embedding. ''Extrinsic Geometric Flows'' was written by Ben Andrews, Bennett Chow, Christine Guenther, and Mat Langford, and published in 2020 as volume 206 of
Graduate Studies in Mathematics Graduate Studies in Mathematics (GSM) is a series of graduate-level textbooks in mathematics published by the American Mathematical Society (AMS). The books in this series are published ihardcoverane-bookformats. List of books *1 ''The General To ...
, a book series of the
American Mathematical Society The American Mathematical Society (AMS) is an association of professional mathematicians dedicated to the interests of mathematical research and scholarship, and serves the national and international community through its publications, meetings, ...
.


Topics

The book consists of four chapters, roughly divided into four sections: *Chapters 1 through 4 concern the
heat equation In mathematics and physics, the heat equation is a certain partial differential equation. Solutions of the heat equation are sometimes known as caloric functions. The theory of the heat equation was first developed by Joseph Fourier in 1822 for t ...
and the curve-shortening flow defined from it, in which a curve moves in the
Euclidean plane In mathematics, the Euclidean plane is a Euclidean space of dimension two. That is, a geometric setting in which two real quantities are required to determine the position of each point ( element of the plane), which includes affine notions of ...
, perpendicularly to itself, at a speed proportional to its curvature. It includes material on curves that remain self-similar as they flow, such as circles and the grim reaper curve y=-\log\cos x, the Gage–Hamilton–Grayson theorem according to which every simple closed curve converges to a circle until eventually collapsing to a point, without ever self-intersecting, and the classification of
ancient solution In mathematics, an ancient solution to a differential equation is a solution that can be extrapolated backwards to all past times, without singularities. That is, it is a solution "that is defined on a time interval of the form .". The term was int ...
s of the flow. *Chapters 5 through 14 concern the
mean curvature flow In the field of differential geometry in mathematics, mean curvature flow is an example of a geometric flow of hypersurfaces in a Riemannian manifold (for example, smooth surfaces in 3-dimensional Euclidean space). Intuitively, a family of surf ...
, a higher dimensional generalization of the curve-shortening flow that uses the mean curvature of a surface to control the speed of its perpendicular motion. After an introductory chapter on the geometry of hypersurfaces, It includes results of Ecker and Huisken concerning "locally Lipschitz entire graphs", and Huisken's theorem that uniformly convex surfaces remain smooth and convex, converging to a sphere, before they collapse to a point.
Huisken's monotonicity formula In differential geometry, Huisken's monotonicity formula states that, if an -dimensional surface in -dimensional Euclidean space undergoes the mean curvature flow, then its convolution with an appropriately scaled and time-reversed heat kernel is ...
is covered, as are the regularity theorems of Brakke and White according to which the flow is almost-everywhere smooth. Several chapters in this section concern the singularities that can develop in this flow, as well as the surfaces that remain self-similar as they flow. *Chapters 15 through 17 concern the
Gauss curvature flow In the mathematical fields of differential geometry and geometric analysis, the Gauss curvature flow is a geometric flow for oriented hypersurfaces of Riemannian manifolds. In the case of curves in a two-dimensional manifold, it is identical with th ...
, a different way of generalizing the curve-shortening flow to higher dimensions using
Gaussian curvature In differential geometry, the Gaussian curvature or Gauss curvature of a surface at a point is the product of the principal curvatures, and , at the given point: K = \kappa_1 \kappa_2. The Gaussian radius of curvature is the reciprocal of . F ...
in place of mean curvature. Although Gaussian curvature is intrinsic, unlike mean curvature, the Gauss curvature flow is extrinsic, because it involves the motion of an embedded surface. Here, variations of the flow involve using a power of the curvature, rather than the curvature itself, to define the speed of the flow, and this raises questions concerning the existence of the flow over finite time intervals, the existence of self-similar solutions, and limiting shapes. The exponent of the curvature is critical here, with convex surfaces converging to an ellipsoid at exponent \tfrac (generizing the affine curve-shortening flow) and to a round sphere for larger exponents. *Chapters 18-20 provide a broader panorama of nonlinear geometric flows. The content within each chapter includes both proofs of the results discussed in the chapter, and references to the mathematics literature; additional references are provided in a commentary section at the end of each chapter, which also provides additional intuition and descriptions of open problems, as well as brief descriptions of additional results in the same area. As well as illustrating the mathematics under discussion with many figures, it humanizes the content by providing photographs of many of the mathematicians that it references. The chapters include exercises, making this book suitable as a graduate textbooks.


Audience and reception

Although intrinsic flows have been the subject of much recent attention in mathematics after their use by Grigori Perelman to solve both the
Poincaré conjecture In the mathematics, mathematical field of geometric topology, the Poincaré conjecture (, , ) is a theorem about the Characterization (mathematics), characterization of the 3-sphere, which is the hypersphere that bounds the unit ball in four-dim ...
and the geometrization conjecture, extrinsic flows also have a long history of important applications in mathematics, closely related to the solutions of
partial differential equation In mathematics, a partial differential equation (PDE) is an equation which imposes relations between the various partial derivatives of a Multivariable calculus, multivariable function. The function is often thought of as an "unknown" to be sol ...
s. Their uses include modeling the growth of biological cells, metallic crystal grains, bubbles in foams, and even "the deformation of rolling stones in a beach". The book's proofs are often simplifications of the proofs in the research literature, but nevertheless it still quite technical, aimed at graduate students and researchers in geometric analysis. Readers are expected to be familiar with the basics of
differential geometry Differential geometry is a mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of differential calculus, integral calculus, linear algebra and multili ...
and partial differential equations. There is more material in the book than could be covered in a single course, but it could either form the basis of a multi-course sequence or a topics course that picks out only some of its material. As well as being a textbook, ''Extrinsic Geometric Flows'' can serve as reference material on flows for specialists in the area.


Related works

This is not the first book on geometric flows. Others include: * * * * Although ''Extrinsic Geometric Flows'' is more comprehensive and up-to-date than these works, it omits some of their topics, including
anisotropic Anisotropy () is the property of a material which allows it to change or assume different properties in different directions, as opposed to isotropy. It can be defined as a difference, when measured along different axes, in a material's physic ...
flows of curves in , applications to the
theory of relativity The theory of relativity usually encompasses two interrelated theories by Albert Einstein: special relativity and general relativity, proposed and published in 1905 and 1915, respectively. Special relativity applies to all physical phenomena in ...
in , and the level-set methods of .


References

{{reflist, refs= {{citation , last = Ni , first = Lei , doi = 10.1090/bull/1740 , doi-access = free , issue = 1 , journal = Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society , mr = 4347206 , pages = 145–154 , series = New Series , title = Review of ''Extrinsic Geometric Flows'' , volume = 59 , year = 2022 , zbl = 1484.00045 {{citation, first=John, last=Ross, title=Review of ''Extrinsic Geometric Flows'', work=MAA Reviews, publisher=Mathematical Association of America, date=January 2021, url=https://www.maa.org/press/maa-reviews/extrinsic-geometric-flows {{citation, first=Gregório Manoel, last=Silva Neto, title=Review of ''Extrinsic Geometric Flows'', work= MathSciNet, mr=4249616 {{citation, first=John, last=Urbas, title=Review of ''Extrinsic Geometric Flows'', work= zbMATH, zbl=1475.53002 Geometric flow Mathematics textbooks 2020 non-fiction books Publications of the American Mathematical Society