isoperimetric problem

isoperimetric problem

      in mathematics, the determination of the shape of the closed plane curve having a given length and enclosing the maximum area. (In the absence of any restriction on shape, the curve is a circle.) The calculus of variations evolved from attempts to solve this problem and the brachistochrone (“least-time”) problem.

      In 1638 the Italian mathematician and astronomer Galileo Galilei (Galileo) first considered the brachistochrone problem, although his solution was flawed. With the discovery of calculus, a new approach to the solution became available, and the Swiss mathematician Johann Bernoulli (Bernoulli, Johann) issued a challenge in 1697 to mathematicians. Isoperimetrics was made the subject of an investigation in the 1690s by Johann and his older brother Jakob Bernoulli (Bernoulli, Jakob), who found and classified many curves having maximum or minimum properties. A major step in generalization was taken by the Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler (Euler, Leonhard), who published the rule (1744) later known as Euler's differential equation, useful in the determination of a minimizing arc between two points on a curve having continuous second derivatives and second partial derivatives. His work was soon supplemented by that of the French mathematicians Joseph-Louis Lagrange (Lagrange, Joseph-Louis, comte de l'Empire) and Adrien-Marie Legendre (Legendre, Adrien-Marie), among others.

      Techniques of the calculus of variations are frequently applied in seeking a particular arc from some given class for which some parameter (length or other quantity dependent upon the entire arc) is minimal or maximal. Surfaces or functions of several variables may be involved. A problem in three-dimensional Euclidean space (that of finding a surface of minimal area having a given boundary) has received much attention and is called the Plateau problem. As a physical example, consider the shapes of soap bubbles and raindrops, which are determined by the surface tension and cohesive forces tending to maintain the fixed volume while decreasing the area to a minimum. Other examples may be found in mechanics, electricity, relativity, and thermodynamics.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Isoperimetric problem — In mathematics, isoperimetric problem may refer to:* The isoperimetric inequality between the length of a closed curve and the area of the region it encloses, as well as its generalizations. * Any of a class of extremal problems arising in… …   Wikipedia

  • Isoperimetric inequality — The isoperimetric inequality is a geometric inequality involving the square of the circumference of a closed curve in the plane and the area of a plane region it encloses, as well as its various generalizations. Isoperimetric literally means… …   Wikipedia

  • Isoperimetric dimension — In mathematics, the isoperimetric dimension of a manifold is a notion of dimension that tries to capture how the large scale behavior of the manifold resembles that of a Euclidean space (unlike the topological dimension or the Hausdorff dimension …   Wikipedia

  • isoperimetric — adjective Having the same perimeter; applied to the problem of finding a plane figure of the largest possible area whose boundary has a specified length …   Wiktionary

  • Isoperimetrisches Problem — Das isoperimetrische Problem der geometrischen Variationsrechnung fragt in seiner ursprünglichen, auf das klassische Griechenland zurückgehenden Form (siehe Problem der Dido), welche Form eine geschlossene Kurve mit gegebener Länge haben muss,… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chaplygin problem — In mathematics, particularly in the fields of nonlinear dynamics and the calculus of variations, the Chaplygin problem is an isoperimetric problem with a differential constraint. Specifically, the problem is to determine what flight path an… …   Wikipedia

  • calculus of variations — the branch of mathematics that deals with the problem of finding a curve or surface that maximizes or minimizes a given expression, usually with several restrictions placed on the desired curve. [1830 40] * * * ▪ mathematics       branch of… …   Universalium

  • List of mathematics articles (I) — NOTOC Ia IA automorphism ICER Icosagon Icosahedral 120 cell Icosahedral prism Icosahedral symmetry Icosahedron Icosian Calculus Icosian game Icosidodecadodecahedron Icosidodecahedron Icositetrachoric honeycomb Icositruncated dodecadodecahedron… …   Wikipedia

  • Introduction to systolic geometry — Systolic geometry is a branch of differential geometry, a field within mathematics, studying problems such as the relationship between the area inside a closed curve C , and the length or perimeter of C . Since the area A may be small while the… …   Wikipedia

  • Cheeger constant — This article discusses the Cheeger isoperimetric constant and Cheeger s inequality in Riemannian geometry. For a different use, see Cheeger constant (graph theory). In Riemannian geometry, the Cheeger isoperimetric constant of a compact… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”