dg1-5 The Second Fundamental Form
dg1-5 The Second Fundamental Form
dg1-5 The Second Fundamental Form
~ i as viX
~ i.
X
Example. We denote vi X
i
X
Example. We denote gij vi w j as gij vi w j .
i,j
~ 00 = α
α ~ 00tan + α
~ 00nor
~ 00 , α
In the figure, α ~ 00tan , and α
~ 00nor all line in the same plane.
1.5. The Second Fundamental Form 3
dX~i
~ i + ui0 X
~ 00 = ui00 X
α ~ 0 = ui00 X
~ i + ui0 .
i
ds
~ i is part of α
Now ui00 X ~ 0 may also have a component in the tangent
~ 00tan , but ui0 X i
plane. Well,
We now need only to write X ~ ij in terms of a component in the tangent plane (and
so in terms of X~ 1 and X~ 2 ) and a component normal to the tangent plane (which
~ ).
will be a multiple of U
~ ij = Γr X
X ~ ~
ij r + Lij U .
Note. Since projections are computed from dot products, we immediately have
that
~1 × X
X ~2
~ ~ ~
Lij = Xij · U = Xij · .
~1 × X
kX ~ 2k
~ 00 = α
~ 00tan + α
~ 00nor = ur00 + Γrij ui0 uj0 X~ r + Lij ui0 uj0 U~.
α
(Notice this differs from the text’s definition on page 44.) We denote the determi-
nate of this matrix as L.
Note. We will see that the second fundamental form reflects the extrinsic geometry
of surface M (that is, the way M is embedded in E 3; “how it curves relative to
that space” as the text says).
1.5. The Second Fundamental Form 5
~
X(u, v) = (f (u) cos v, f (u) sin v, g(u)).
Solution. Well
~
~ 1 = ∂ X = (f 0(u) cos v, f 0 (u) sin v, g 0 (u))
X
∂u
~
~ 2 = ∂ X = (−f (u) sin v, f (u) cos v, 0)
X
∂v
and so (from Exercise 1.4.5)
~ = f (u)
U p (−g 0 (u) cos v, −g 0 (u) sin v, f 0 (u)).
0 2 0
|f (u)| f (u) + g (u) 2
Next,
∂ 2X~
~
X11 = = (f 00 (u) cos v, f 00 (u) sin v, g 00 (u))
∂ u
2
2~
~ 22 = ∂ X = (−f (u) cos v, −f (u) sin v, 0)
X
∂ 2v
∂ 2X~
~
X12 = = (−f 0 (u) sin v, f 0 (u) cos v, 0) = X ~ 21.
∂u∂v
So
~ 11 · U
~ = f (u)
L11 = X p (−f 00 (u)g 0(u) cos2 v
|f (u)| f 0(u)2 + g 0 (u)2
−f 00 (u)g 0 (u) sin2 v + f 0(u)g 00 (u))
f (u)(f 0 (u)g 00 (u) − f 00 (u)g 0(u))
= p
|f (u)| f 0 (u)2 + g 0 (u)2
~ ~ (f (u)g 0 (u) cos v sin v − f (u)g 0 (u) cos v sin v + 0)f (u)
L12 = X12 · U = p
|f (u)| f 0(u)2 + g 0 (u)2
= 0 = L21
1.5. The Second Fundamental Form 6
~ 22 · U
~ = f (u)
L22 = X p (f (u)g 0 (u) cos2 v
|f (u)| f 0(u)2 + g 0 (u)
+f (u)g 0 (u) sin2 v + 0)
f (u)2 g 0(u) |f (u)|g 0(u)
= p =p .
|f (u)| f 0 (u) + g 0 (u)2 f 0 (u)2 + g 0 (u)2
Therefore we have
kn (~v) = Lij vi vj
where ~v = (v1 , v2 ) (the coordinate vector of ~v with respect to the ordered bases
~ 1, X
(X ~ 2 ) of the tangent plane).
Example (Exercise 1.5.5). Find the normal curvature of the surface z = f (x, y)
at an arbitrary point, in the direction of a unit tangent vector (a, b, c) at that point.
Solution. We have
~
~ 1 = ∂ X = (1, 0, ∂f (u, v)) = (1, 0, fu )
X
∂u ∂u
~
~ 2 = ∂ X = (0, 1, ∂f (u, v)) = (0, 1, fv ).
X
∂v ∂v
1.5. The Second Fundamental Form 7
So
~i ~j ~k
~1 × X
X ~2 = 1 0 fu = (−fu , −fv , 1)
0 1 fv
~1 × X
~ 2k =
p
and kX (fu)2 + (fv )2 + 1. Therefore
~ ~
~ = X1 × X2 = p
U
1
(−fu , −fv , 1).
~1 × X
kX ~ 2k (fu)2 + (fv )2 + 1
Now
∂ 2X~
~
X11 = = (0, 0, fuu )
∂u2
∂ 2X~
~
X12 = ~ 21
= (0, 0, fuv ) = X
∂u ∂v
∂ 2X~
~
X22 = = (0, 0, fvv )
∂v2
and so
~ 11 · U
~ =p fuu
L11 = X
(fu)2 + (fv )2 + 1
~ 22 · U
~ =p fvv
L22 = X
(fu)2 + (fv )2 + 1
~ 12 · U
~ =p fuv
L12 = X = L21 .
(fu)2 + (fv )2 + 1
~ i = v1 (1, 0, fu ) + v2 (0, 1, fv ) = (a, b, c), implying that v1 = a and
Now ~v = viX
v2 = b. Hence
Revised: 6/13/2019