Isometric immersions and the waving of flags

By Stephen Preston

Appears in collection : 2022 - T3 - WS2 - Geometry, Topology and Statistics in Data Sciences

A physical flag can be modeled geometrically as an isometric immersion of a rectangle into space, with one edge fixed along the flagpole. Its motion, in the absence of gravity and wind, can be modeled as a geodesic in the space of all isometric immersions, where the Riemannian metric is inherited from the kinetic energy on the much larger space of all immersions. In this talk I will show how generically such an isometric immersion can be described completely by the curve describing the top or bottom edge, which gives a global version of a classical local result in differential geometry. Using this, I will show how to derive the geodesic equation, which turns out to be a highly nonlinear, nonlocal coupled system of two wave equations in one space variable, with tension determined by solving an ODE system. The new model has the potential to describe motion of cloth with much fewer variables than the traditional method of strongly constraining three functions of two space variables.

This is joint work with Martin Bauer and Jakob Moeller-Andersen.

Information about the video

Citation data

  • DOI 10.57987/IHP.2022.T3.WS2.007
  • Cite this video Preston, Stephen (14/10/2022). Isometric immersions and the waving of flags. IHP. Audiovisual resource. DOI: 10.57987/IHP.2022.T3.WS2.007
  • URL https://dx.doi.org/10.57987/IHP.2022.T3.WS2.007

Domain(s)

Bibliography

  • Martin Bauer, Jakob Møller-Andersen, Stephen C. Preston / Isometric Immersions and the Waving of Flags arXIv:1905.06378

Last related questions on MathOverflow

You have to connect your Carmin.tv account with mathoverflow to add question

Ask a question on MathOverflow




Register

  • Bookmark videos
  • Add videos to see later &
    keep your browsing history
  • Comment with the scientific
    community
  • Get notification updates
    for your favorite subjects
Give feedback