Is Mean Curvature Flow a Gradient Flow?
Abstract
It is well-known that the mean curvature flow is a formal gradient flow of the perimeter functional. However, by the work of Michor and Mumford [7,8], the formal Riemannian structure that is compatible with the gradient flow structure induces a degenerate metric on the space of hypersurfaces. It is then natural to ask whether there is a nondegenerate metric space of hypersurfaces, on which the mean curvature flow admits a gradient flow structure. In this paper we study the mean curvature flow on two nondegenerate metric spaces of simple closed plane curves: the uniformness-preserving metric structure proposed by Shi and Vorotnikov [11] and the curvature-weighted structure proposed by Michor and Mumford [8], and prove that the mean curvature flow is not a gradient flow in either of the spaces.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2212.03701,
title = {Is Mean Curvature Flow a Gradient Flow?},
author = {Zhonggan Huang},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2212.03701},
year = {2022}
}