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Geometry of Harmonic Maps 1996 ed. [Kietas viršelis]

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Harmonic maps are solutions to a natural geometrical variational prob­ lem. This notion grew out of essential notions in differential geometry, such as geodesics, minimal surfaces and harmonic functions. Harmonic maps are also closely related to holomorphic maps in several complex variables, to the theory of stochastic processes, to nonlinear field theory in theoretical physics, and to the theory of liquid crystals in materials science. During the past thirty years this subject has been developed extensively. The monograph is by no means intended to give a complete description of the theory of harmonic maps. For example, the book excludes a large part of the theory of harmonic maps from 2-dimensional domains, where the methods are quite different from those discussed here. The first chapter consists of introductory material. Several equivalent definitions of harmonic maps are described, and interesting examples are presented. Various important properties and formulas are derived. Among them are Bochner-type formula for the energy density and the second varia­ tional formula. This chapter serves not only as a basis for the later chapters, but also as a brief introduction to the theory. Chapter 2 is devoted to the conservation law of harmonic maps. Em­ phasis is placed on applications of conservation law to the mono tonicity formula and Liouville-type theorems.
Preface ix
Introduction
1(38)
Vector Bundles
1(8)
Vector Bundles
1(4)
Connections
5(4)
Harmonic Maps
9(8)
Energy
10(1)
Tension Field
11(2)
The First Variational Formula
13(2)
Examples of Harmonic Maps
15(2)
A Bochner Type Formula
17(11)
Hodge-Laplace Operator and Weitzenbock Formula
17(5)
A Bochner Type Formula and Its Applications
22(6)
Basic Properties of Harmonic Maps
28(11)
Maximum Principle
28(4)
Unique Continuation Theorems
32(1)
Second Variational Formula and Stable Harmonic Maps
33(6)
Conservation Law
39(22)
Stress-Energy Tensor and Conservation Law
39(4)
Monotonicity Formula
43(3)
Applications of Conservation Law to Liouville type Theorems
46(3)
Further Generalizations
49(12)
Harmonic Maps and Gauss Maps
61(36)
Generalized Gauss Maps
61(3)
Cone-like Harmonic Maps
64(6)
Generalized Maximum Principle
70(6)
Estimates of Image Diameter and its Applications
76(3)
Gauss Image of a Space-Like Hypersurface in Minkowski Space
79(7)
Gauss Image of a Space-Like Submanifold in Pseudo-Euclidean Space
86(11)
Geometry of RIV (2)
87(2)
Gauss Map
89(2)
Gauss Image of a Space-like Surface in R42
91(6)
Harmonic Maps and Holomorphic Maps
97(24)
Partial Energies
97(2)
Harmonicity of Holomorphic Maps
99(3)
Holomorphicity of Harmonic Maps
102(19)
Existence, Nonexistence and Regularity
121(26)
Direct Method of the Calculus of Variations
121(3)
Regularity Theorems
124(3)
Nonexistence and Existence
127(5)
Regularity Results of Harmonic Maps into Positively Curved Manifolds
132(15)
Equivariant Harmonic Maps
147(80)
Riemannian Submersions and Equivariant Harmonic Maps
147(5)
Reduction Theorems
152(4)
Equivariant Variational Formulas
156(6)
On Harmonic Representatives of Πm (Sm)
162(31)
ODE of Smith's Construction
163(3)
The Solvability of ODE (6.31) and (6.33)
166(13)
Application of Smith's Construction
179(2)
Another Construction of Equivariant Maps
181(5)
The Solvability of ODE (6.63) and (6.65)
186(5)
On Harmonic Representatives of Homotopy Group of the Higher Dimensional Sphere
191(2)
Harmonic Maps via Isoparametric Maps
193(9)
Harmonic Maps of Projective Spaces
202(7)
Harmonic Maps from QPn - 1 into Sm1
205(1)
Harmonic Maps from QPn - 1 into QPm-1
206(3)
Equivariant Boundary Value Problems
209(18)
The Reduced PDE
209(3)
The Solvability of PDE
212(4)
Construction of Equivariant Maps into CP2
216(1)
Heat Flow
217(6)
Global Existence and Subconvergence
223(4)
References 227(12)
Index 239