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In mathematics, and especially affine differential geometry, the affine focal set of a smooth submanifold M embedded in a smooth manifold N is the caustic generated by the affine normal lines. It can be realised as the bifurcation set of a certain family of functions. The bifurcation set is the set of parameter values of the family which yield functions with degenerate singularities. Please note that this is not the same as the bifurcation diagram in dynamical systems. Let us assume that M is an n-dimensional smooth hypersurface in real (n+1)-space. We assume that M has no points where the second fundamental form is degenerate. We recall from the article affine differential geometry that there is a unique transverse vector field over M. This is the affine normal vector field, or the Blaschke normal field. The key thing to note is that a special (i.e. det = 1) affine transformation of real (n + 1)-space will carry the affine normal vector field of M onto the affine normal vector field of the image of M under the transformation.
[edit] Geometric interpretationLet us consider a local parametrisation of M. Let The affine normal vector field will be denoted by For a fixed The affine focal set is given geometrically as the infinitesimal intersections of the n-parameter family of affine normal lines. To calculate this we choose an affine normal line, say at point p; then we look at the affine normal lines at points infinitesimally close to p an see if any intersect the one at p. If we choose a point infinitesimally close to For t and This can be done by using power series expansions, and is not too difficult; it is lengthy and has thus been omitted. We recall from the article affine differential geometry that the affine shape operator S is a type (1,1)-tensor field on M, and is given by We find that the solutions to The affine focal set need not be made up of smooth hypersurfaces. In fact, for a generic hypersurface M, the affine focal set will have singularities. The singularities could be found by calculation, but that may be difficult, and we still have no idea of what the singularity looks like up to diffeomorphism. If we use some singularity theory then we get much more information. [edit] Singularity theory approachThe idea here is to define a family of functions over M. The family will have the ambient real (n + 1)-space as its parameter space, i.e. for each choice of ambient point we will get a function defined over M. This family is the family of affine distance functions: Given an ambient point where Z is a tangent vector. We now seek the bifurcation set of the family Δ, i.e. the ambient points for which the restricted function has degenertate singularity at some p. A function has degenerate singularity if both the Jacobian matrix of first order partial derivatives and the Hessian matrix of second order partial derivatives have zero determinant. To discover if the Jacobian matrix has zero determinant we differentiate the equation x - p = Z + ΔA. Let X be a tangent vector to M, and differentiate in that direction: where I is the identity. This tells us that To compute the Hessian matrix we consider the differential two-form
Now assume that Δ has a singularity at p, i.e. Z = 0, then we have the two-form
We have also seen that
This is degenerate as a two-form if, and only if, there exists non-zero X for which it is zero for all Y. Since h is non-degenerate it must be that det(I − ΔS) = 0 and [edit] Singular pointsThe affine focal set can be the following: To find the singular points we simply differentiate p + tA in some tangent direction X: The affine focal set is singular if, and only if, there exists non-zero X such that [edit] Local structureWe can use the standard ideas in singularity theory to classify, up to local diffeomorphism, the affine focal set. If the family of affine distance functions can be shown to be a certain kind of family then the local structure is known. We want the family of affine distance functions to be a versal unfolding of the singularities which arrise. The affine focal set of a plane curve will generically consist of smooth pieces of curve and ordinary cusp points (semi-cubical palabara|semi-cubical parabolae). The affine focal set of a surface in three-space will generically consist of smooth pieces of surface, cuspidal cylinder points (A3), swallowtail points (A4), purse points ( The question of the local structure in much higher dimension is of great interest. For example, we were able to construct a discrete list of singularity types (up to local diffeomprhism). In much higher dimensions no such discrete list can be costructed, there are functional modulii. [edit] References
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