Hedgehog (geometry)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In
differential geometry Differential geometry is a Mathematics, mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of Calculus, single variable calculus, vector calculus, lin ...
, a hedgehog or plane hedgehog is a type of
plane curve In mathematics, a plane curve is a curve in a plane that may be a Euclidean plane, an affine plane or a projective plane. The most frequently studied cases are smooth plane curves (including piecewise smooth plane curves), and algebraic plane c ...
, the
envelope An envelope is a common packaging item, usually made of thin, flat material. It is designed to contain a flat object, such as a letter (message), letter or Greeting card, card. Traditional envelopes are made from sheets of paper cut to one o ...
of a family of lines determined by a
support function In mathematics, the support function ''h'A'' of a non-empty closed convex set ''A'' in \mathbb^n describes the (signed) distances of supporting hyperplanes of ''A'' from the origin. The support function is a convex function on \mathbb^n. Any ...
. More intuitively, sufficiently well-behaved hedgehogs are plane curves with one tangent line in each oriented direction. A projective hedgehog is a restricted type of hedgehog, defined from an anti-symmetric support function, and (again when sufficiently well-behaved) forms a curve with one tangent line in each direction, regardless of orientation. Every closed strictly convex curve is the envelope of its
supporting line In geometry, a supporting line ''L'' of a curve ''C'' in the plane is a line that contains a point of ''C'', but does not separate any two points of ''C''."The geometry of geodesics", Herbert Busemannp. 158/ref> In other words, ''C'' lies complete ...
s. The
astroid In mathematics, an astroid is a particular type of roulette curve: a hypocycloid with four cusp (singularity), cusps. Specifically, it is the Locus (mathematics), locus of a point on a circle as it Rolling, rolls inside a fixed circle with f ...
forms a non-convex hedgehog, and the
deltoid curve In geometry, a deltoid curve, also known as a tricuspoid curve or Steiner curve, is a hypocycloid of three cusps. In other words, it is the roulette created by a point on the circumference of a circle as it rolls without slipping along the insi ...
forms a projective hedgehog. Hedgehogs can also be defined from support functions of hyperplanes in higher dimensions.


Definitions

Formally, a planar support function can be defined as a continuously differentiable function h from the unit circle in the plane to real numbers, or equivalently as a function f(\theta)=h\bigl((\cos\theta,\sin\theta)\bigr) from angles to real numbers. For each point q on the unit circle, it defines a line, the set of points p for which p\cdot q = h(q). This line is perpendicular to vector q, passes through the point qh(q), and is at distance , h(q), from the
origin Origin(s) or The Origin may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Comics and manga * ''Origin'' (comics), a Wolverine comic book mini-series published by Marvel Comics in 2002 * ''The Origin'' (Buffy comic), a 1999 ''Buffy the Vampire Sl ...
. A support function is anti-symmetric when, for all q, h(-q)=-h(q), or equivalently in terms of angles f(\theta)=-f(\theta+\pi), so that q and -q define the same line as each other. Given any support function h, its hedgehog is denoted \mathcal_h. In terms of the function f and the angle \theta it has the
parametric equation In mathematics, a parametric equation expresses several quantities, such as the coordinates of a point (mathematics), point, as Function (mathematics), functions of one or several variable (mathematics), variables called parameters. In the case ...
s : \begin x&=f(\theta)\cos\theta-f'(\theta)\sin\theta\\ y&=f(\theta)\sin\theta+f'(\theta)\cos\theta \end A hedgehog is ''non-singular'' when it has a tangent line at each of its points. A projective hedgehog is defined by an anti-symmetric support function. Hedgehogs can also be defined in the same way in higher dimensions, as envelopes of hyperplanes defined by support functions.


Examples

The support function describing the
supporting line In geometry, a supporting line ''L'' of a curve ''C'' in the plane is a line that contains a point of ''C'', but does not separate any two points of ''C''."The geometry of geodesics", Herbert Busemannp. 158/ref> In other words, ''C'' lies complete ...
s for a convex set K is defined by h(q)=\max \. The hedgehog of the support function of any strictly convex set is its boundary, parameterized by the angle of its supporting lines. When a convex set is not strictly convex (it has a
line segment In geometry, a line segment is a part of a line (mathematics), straight line that is bounded by two distinct endpoints (its extreme points), and contains every Point (geometry), point on the line that is between its endpoints. It is a special c ...
in its boundary), its support function is continuous but not continuously differentiable, and the parametric equations above jump discontinuously across the line segment instead of defining a continuous curve, so it is not defined as a hedgehog. The
astroid In mathematics, an astroid is a particular type of roulette curve: a hypocycloid with four cusp (singularity), cusps. Specifically, it is the Locus (mathematics), locus of a point on a circle as it Rolling, rolls inside a fixed circle with f ...
provides an example of a non-convex hedgehog. An example of a projective hedgehog, defined from an anti-symmetric support function, is given by the
deltoid curve In geometry, a deltoid curve, also known as a tricuspoid curve or Steiner curve, is a hypocycloid of three cusps. In other words, it is the roulette created by a point on the circumference of a circle as it rolls without slipping along the insi ...
. The deltoid is a
simple closed curve In mathematics, a curve (also called a curved line in older texts) is an object similar to a line, but that does not have to be straight. Intuitively, a curve may be thought of as the trace left by a moving point. This is the definition that ...
but other hedgehogs may self-intersect, or otherwise behave badly. In particular, there exist anti-symmetric support functions based on the
Weierstrass function In mathematics, the Weierstrass function, named after its discoverer, Karl Weierstrass, is an example of a real-valued function (mathematics), function that is continuous function, continuous everywhere but Differentiable function, differentiab ...
whose corresponding projective hedgehogs are
fractal In mathematics, a fractal is a Shape, geometric shape containing detailed structure at arbitrarily small scales, usually having a fractal dimension strictly exceeding the topological dimension. Many fractals appear similar at various scale ...
curves that are continuous but nowhere differentiable and have infinite length. Every strictly convex body in the plane defines a projective hedgehog, its ''middle hedgehog'', the envelope of lines halfway between each pair of parallel supporting lines. Although triangles are not strictly convex, the envelope defined in this way for a triangle is its
medial triangle In Euclidean geometry, the medial triangle or midpoint triangle of a triangle is the triangle with vertices at the midpoints of the triangle's sides . It is the case of the midpoint polygon of a polygon with sides. The medial triangle is no ...
. The points of the middle hedgehog are the midpoints of line segments connecting the pairs of points where each pair of parallel supporting lines contact the body. It has finite length, equal to half the perimeter of the given body. Each extreme point of the
convex hull In geometry, the convex hull, convex envelope or convex closure of a shape is the smallest convex set that contains it. The convex hull may be defined either as the intersection of all convex sets containing a given subset of a Euclidean space, ...
of the middle hedgehog is a ''convexity point'', a point such that the union of the body with its reflection through this point is convex. There are always at least three such points, and the triangles and Reuleaux triangle provide examples where there are exactly three. For a non-singular hedgehog, its middle hedgehog is also known as the Wigner caustic. The oriented area of the Wigner caustic improves the classical
isoperimetric inequality In mathematics, the isoperimetric inequality is a geometric inequality involving the square of the circumference of a closed curve in the plane and the area of a plane region it encloses, as well as its various generalizations. '' Isoperimetric'' ...
.


Properties

A non-singular hedgehog has a unique tangent line in each oriented direction, belonging to its defining family of lines. Correspondingly, any sufficiently well-behaved projective hedgehog has a unique tangent line in each direction without respect to orientation. Pairs of hedgehogs can be combined by the
pointwise In mathematics, the qualifier pointwise is used to indicate that a certain property is defined by considering each value f(x) of some Function (mathematics), function f. An important class of pointwise concepts are the ''pointwise operations'', that ...
sum of their support functions. This operation extends
Minkowski addition In geometry, the Minkowski sum of two set (mathematics), sets of position vectors ''A'' and ''B'' in Euclidean space is formed by vector addition, adding each vector in ''A'' to each vector in ''B'': A + B = \ The Minkowski difference (also ''M ...
of convex bodies and is analogous to Minkowski addition in multiple ways. It can be used to characterize curves of constant width: a convex hedgehog has constant width w if and only if its support function is formed by adding w/2 to the support function of a projective hedgehog. That is, the curves of constant width are exactly the convex hedgehogs formed as sums of projective hedgehogs and circles. Every projective hedgehog has at least three singularities (typically, cusps). When a projective hedgehog has finite length, a construction of
Leonhard Euler Leonhard Euler ( ; ; ; 15 April 170718 September 1783) was a Swiss polymath who was active as a mathematician, physicist, astronomer, logician, geographer, and engineer. He founded the studies of graph theory and topology and made influential ...
shows that its
involute In mathematics, an involute (also known as an evolvent) is a particular type of curve that is dependent on another shape or curve. An involute of a curve is the Locus (mathematics), locus of a point on a piece of taut string as the string is eith ...
s of sufficiently high radius are curves of constant width.


Generalization

More generally, hedgehogs are the natural geometrical objects that represent the formal differences of convex bodies: given (K,L) an ordered pair of convex bodies in the Euclidean vector space \mathbb^, there exists one, and only one, hedgehog that represents the formal difference K – L in \mathbb^. Polygonal case in the plane: Case of smooth convex bodies with positive Gauss curvature: Subtracting two convex hypersurfaces (with positive Gauss curvature) by subtracting the points corresponding to a same outer unit normal to obtain a (possibly singular and self-intersecting) hypersurface: The idea of using Minkowski differences of convex bodies may be traced back to a couple of papers by A.D. Alexandrov and H. Geppert in the 1930s. Many classical notions for convex bodies extend to hedgehogs and quite a number of classical results find their counterparts. Of course, a few adaptations are necessary. In particular, volumes have to be replaced by their algebraic versions.Y. Martinez-Maure, A stability estimate for the Aleksandrov-Fenchel inequality under regularity assumptions, Monatshefte für Mathematik 182 (2017), 65-76 In a long series of papers, hedgehogs and their extensions were studied by Y. Martinez-Maure under various aspects. The most striking result of this hedgehog theory was the construction of counterexamples to an old conjectured characterization of the 2-sphere.Panina Gaiane, New counterexamples to A. D. Alexandrov's hypothesis. Adv. Geom 5 (2005), 301–317


References

{{reflist Plane curves Differential geometry