A convex function f may be called sublinear in the following sense; if a linear function l is ::=: j at the boundary points of an interval, then l:> j in the interior of that interval also. If we replace the terms interval and linear junction by the terms domain and harmonic function, we obtain a st
On the Problem of Plateau / Subharmonic Functions
β Scribed by Tibor RadΓ³ (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1971
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 177
- Series
- Ergebnisse der Mathematik und Ihrer GrenΖΆgebiete 2
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A convex function f may be called sublinear in the following sense; if a linear function l is ::=: j at the boundary points of an interval, then l:> j in the interior of that interval also. If we replace the terms interval and linear junction by the terms domain and harmonic function, we obtain a statement which expresses the characteristic property of subharmonic functions of two or more variables. This geΒ neralization, formulated and developed by F. RIEsz, immediately atΒ tracted the attention of many mathematicians, both on account of its intrinsic interest and on account of the wide range of its applications. If f (z) is an analytic function of the complex variable z = x + i y. then If (z) I is subharmonic. The potential of a negative mass-distribuΒ tion is subharmonic. In differential geometry, surfaces of negative curvature and minimal surfaces can be characterized in terms of subΒ harmonic functions. The idea of a subharmonic function leads to significant applications and interpretations in the fields just referred to, andΒ· conversely, every one of these fields is an apparently inΒ exhaustible source of new theorems on subharmonic functions, either by analogy or by direct implication.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XVII
Introduction....Pages 1-1
Curves and surfaces....Pages 2-18
Minimal surfaces in the small....Pages 19-30
Minimal surfaces in the large....Pages 31-49
The non-parametric problem....Pages 49-68
The problem of Plateau in the parametric form....Pages 68-90
The simultaneous problem in the parametric form. Generalizations....Pages 90-109
Definition and preliminary discussion of subharmonic functions....Pages 111-116
Integral means of subharmonic functions....Pages 117-122
Criteria and constructions for subharmonic functions....Pages 122-132
Examples of subharmonic functions....Pages 132-141
Harmonic majorants of subharmonic functions....Pages 141-149
Representation of subharmonic functions in terms of potentials....Pages 150-155
Analogies between harmonic and subharmonic functions....Pages 156-163
Back Matter....Pages 164-166
β¦ Subjects
Mathematics, general
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>The most immediate one-dimensional variation problem is certainly the problem of determining an arc of curve, bounded by two given and having a smallest possible length. The problem of deterΒ points mining and investigating a surface with given boundary and with a smallest possible area might the