Skip to main content
Log in

Cartan’s magic formula and soap film structures

  • Published:
The Journal of Geometric Analysis Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

A soap film is actually a thin solid fluid bounded by two surfaces of opposite orientation. It is natural to model the film using one polyhedron for each side. Two problems are to get the polyhedra for both sides to be in the same place without canceling each other out and to model triple junctions without introducing extra boundary components. We use chainlet geometry to create dipole cells and mass cells which accomplish these goals and model faithfully all observable soap films and bubbles. We introduce a new norm on chains of these cells and prove lower semicontinuity of area. A geometric version of Carton’s magic formula provides the necessary boundary coherence.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  1. Almgren, F.J. Jr., Existence and regularity almost everywhere of solutions to elliptic variational problems among surfaces of varying topological type and singularity structure,Ann. Math.,87, 321–391, (1968).

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  2. Almgren, F.J. Jr.,Plateau’s Problem, Benjamin, New York, (1966).

    MATH  Google Scholar 

  3. Brakke, K. Soap films and covering spaces,J. Geom. Anal.,5(4), 445–514, (1995).

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  4. Douglas, J. Solution of the problem of Plateau,Trans. Am. Math. Soc.,33, 263–321, (1931).

    Article  MATH  Google Scholar 

  5. Federer, H. and Fleming, W.H. Normal and integral currents,Ann. Math.,72, 458–520, (1960).

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  6. Fleming, W.H. Flat chains over a finite coefficient group,Trans. AMS,121, 160–186, (1966), Jan–Feb.

    Article  MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  7. Harrison, J. Continuity of the integral as a function of the domain,J. Geom. Anal.,8(5), 769–795, (1998).

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  8. Harrison, J. Isomorphisms of differential forms and cochains,J. Geom. Anal.,8(5), 797–807, (1998).

    MathSciNet  MATH  Google Scholar 

  9. Harrison, J. Geometric representations of currents and distributions, to appear,Proceedings of Fractal Geometry and Stochastics III, Friedrichroda, Germany, (2003).

    Google Scholar 

  10. Harrison, J. On Plateau’s problem for soap films with a bound on energy,J. Geom. Anal., to appear.

  11. Harrison, J. Discrete exterior calculus, preprint.

  12. Osserman, R.Variations on a Theme of Plateau, Global Analysis and its Applications III, International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, (1974).

    Google Scholar 

  13. Whitney, H.Geometric Integration Theory, Princeton University Press, (1957).

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Jenny Harrison.

Additional information

Communicated by Jenny Harrison

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Harrison, J. Cartan’s magic formula and soap film structures. J Geom Anal 14, 47–61 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02921865

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02921865

Math Subject Classifications

Key Words and Phrases

Navigation