Orientation Asymmetric Surface Model for Membranes: Finsler Geometry Modeling
Abstract
We study triangulated surface models with nontrivial surface metrices for membranes. The surface model is defined by a mapping r from a two dimensional parameter space M to the three dimensional Euclidean space R3. The metric variable gab, which is always fixed to the Euclidean metric δab, can be extended to a more general non-Euclidean metric on M in the continuous model. The problem we focus on in this paper is whether such an extension is well-defined or not in the discrete model. We find that a discrete surface model with nontrivial metric becomes well-defined if it is treated in the context of Finsler geometry (FG) modeling, where triangle edge length in M depends on the direction. It is also shown that the discrete FG model is orientation assymetric on invertible surfaces in general, and for this reason, the FG model has a potential advantage for describing real physical membranes, which are expected to have some assymetries for orientation changing transformations.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.