158 Unified Geometric Extremum Physics
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2026/04/30
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A Physical Solution to the Plateau Problem
Under the Same Paradigm
Abstract (brief)
By treating the surface area as a potential energy functional and applying the minimum energy principle, we show that the solution to the Plateau problem must be a surface of vanishing mean curvature (a minimal surface). This approach follows exactly the same paradigm as the physical proof of the isoperimetric problem and Perelman’s entropy monotonicity method for the Poincaré Conjecture:
define energy/entropy → extremum principle → constant/vanishing curvature → unique geometric structure.
Part I: The Plateau Problem Restatement
Let \Gamma be a fixed simple closed curve in \mathbb{R}^3.
Plateau problem:
Find a surface S bounded by \Gamma that minimizes surface area among all such surfaces.
Part II: Physical Reformulation
Define the potential energy of the surface as its area:
E = \text{Area}(S)
The Plateau problem is equivalent to:
Minimize E under the constraint \partial S = \Gamma.
This is a direct analog:
- Isoperimetric: maximize area \leftrightarrow minimize E=-A
- Plateau: minimize area \leftrightarrow minimize E=A
Both are energy-minimization problems.
Part III: Minimum Energy Principle
By the principle of minimum energy:
A stable equilibrium surface satisfies
\delta E = 0
that is, the first variation of energy vanishes.
Since E = \text{Area}(S), this is equivalent to the first variation of area equal to zero:
\delta \text{Area} = 0
Part IV: Equilibrium Condition: Vanishing Mean Curvature
A classical result from surface variational calculus:
The first variation of area vanishes if and only if the mean curvature H is identically zero.
H = 0
Physical meaning:
This corresponds to the balance of surface tension on a soap film, with no net force acting on any point.
Part V: Conclusion for the Plateau Problem
Under fixed boundary \Gamma:
1. Energy = Surface area
2. Minimization \delta E = 0
3. Yields H = 0 (mean curvature zero)
4. Such surfaces are precisely minimal surfaces
Thus the solution to the Plateau problem is a minimal surface.
Unified Logical Chain (All Three Problems Together)
1. Isoperimetric problem
E=-A \longrightarrow \min E \longrightarrow \kappa=\text{constant} \longrightarrow \text{Circle}
2. Plateau problem
E=\text{Area} \longrightarrow \min E \longrightarrow H=0 \longrightarrow \text{Minimal Surface}
3. Poincaré Conjecture (Perelman)
\text{Entropy } \mathcal{W} \longrightarrow \text{monotonicity} \longrightarrow \text{Ricci soliton} \longrightarrow \mathbb{S}^3
Final One-Sentence Claim
The isoperimetric problem, the Plateau problem, and the Poincaré Conjecture are not three separate theories,
but three instances of the same universal physical–geometric paradigm:
energy/entropy extremum → curvature condition → unique canonical geometry.