Swimming in Curved Surfaces and Gauss Curvature

The Cartesian-Newtonian paradigm of mechanics establishes that, within an inertial frame, a body either remains at rest or moves uniformly on a line, unless a force acts externally upon it. This crucial assertion breaks down when the classical concepts of space, time and measurement reveal to be ina...

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Main Authors: Leonardo Solanilla, William O Clavijo, Yessica P Velasco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pontificia Universidad Javeriana 2018-08-01
Series:Universitas Scientiarum
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.javeriana.edu.co/index.php/scientarium/article/view/20893
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spelling doaj-ae5ec0eca69b40fcb43efec351de9c482020-11-25T00:31:14ZengPontificia Universidad JaverianaUniversitas Scientiarum0122-74832027-13522018-08-0123231933110.11144/Javeriana.SC23-2.sicsSwimming in Curved Surfaces and Gauss CurvatureLeonardo Solanilla0William O Clavijo1Yessica P Velasco2Departamento de Matemáticas y Estadística, Universidad del Tolima, Barrio Santa Elena, Ibagué, ColombiaDepartamento de Matemáticas y Estadística, Universidad del Tolima, Barrio Santa Elena, Ibagué, ColombiaDepartamento de Matemáticas y Estadística, Universidad del Tolima, Barrio Santa Elena, Ibagué, ColombiaThe Cartesian-Newtonian paradigm of mechanics establishes that, within an inertial frame, a body either remains at rest or moves uniformly on a line, unless a force acts externally upon it. This crucial assertion breaks down when the classical concepts of space, time and measurement reveal to be inadequate. If, for example, the space is non-flat, an effective translation might occur from rest in the absence of external applied force. In this paper we examine mathematically the motion of a small object or lizard on an arbitrary curved surface. Particularly, we allow the lizard’s shape to undergo a cyclic deformation due exclusively to internal forces, so that the total linear momentum is conserved. In addition to the fact that the deformation produces a swimming event, we prove –under fairly simplifying assumptions that such a translationis some what directly proportional to the Gauss curvature of the surface at the point where the lizardlies.https://revistas.javeriana.edu.co/index.php/scientarium/article/view/20893Non-Euclidean Differential GeometryLocal Riemannian GeometryLagrangian FormalismEquations of Motion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leonardo Solanilla
William O Clavijo
Yessica P Velasco
spellingShingle Leonardo Solanilla
William O Clavijo
Yessica P Velasco
Swimming in Curved Surfaces and Gauss Curvature
Universitas Scientiarum
Non-Euclidean Differential Geometry
Local Riemannian Geometry
Lagrangian Formalism
Equations of Motion
author_facet Leonardo Solanilla
William O Clavijo
Yessica P Velasco
author_sort Leonardo Solanilla
title Swimming in Curved Surfaces and Gauss Curvature
title_short Swimming in Curved Surfaces and Gauss Curvature
title_full Swimming in Curved Surfaces and Gauss Curvature
title_fullStr Swimming in Curved Surfaces and Gauss Curvature
title_full_unstemmed Swimming in Curved Surfaces and Gauss Curvature
title_sort swimming in curved surfaces and gauss curvature
publisher Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
series Universitas Scientiarum
issn 0122-7483
2027-1352
publishDate 2018-08-01
description The Cartesian-Newtonian paradigm of mechanics establishes that, within an inertial frame, a body either remains at rest or moves uniformly on a line, unless a force acts externally upon it. This crucial assertion breaks down when the classical concepts of space, time and measurement reveal to be inadequate. If, for example, the space is non-flat, an effective translation might occur from rest in the absence of external applied force. In this paper we examine mathematically the motion of a small object or lizard on an arbitrary curved surface. Particularly, we allow the lizard’s shape to undergo a cyclic deformation due exclusively to internal forces, so that the total linear momentum is conserved. In addition to the fact that the deformation produces a swimming event, we prove –under fairly simplifying assumptions that such a translationis some what directly proportional to the Gauss curvature of the surface at the point where the lizardlies.
topic Non-Euclidean Differential Geometry
Local Riemannian Geometry
Lagrangian Formalism
Equations of Motion
url https://revistas.javeriana.edu.co/index.php/scientarium/article/view/20893
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AT williamoclavijo swimmingincurvedsurfacesandgausscurvature
AT yessicapvelasco swimmingincurvedsurfacesandgausscurvature
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