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Complexity of parabolic systems

Author(s)
Colding, Tobias H; Minicozzi, William P
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Abstract
Abstract We first bound the codimension of an ancient mean curvature flow by the entropy. As a consequence, all blowups lie in a Euclidean subspace whose dimension is bounded by the entropy and dimension of the evolving submanifolds. This drastically reduces the complexity of the system. We use this in a major application of our new methods to give the first general bounds on generic singularities of surfaces in arbitrary codimension. We also show sharp bounds for codimension in arguably some of the most important situations of general ancient flows. Namely, we prove that in any dimension and codimension any ancient flow that is cylindrical at − ∞ $-\infty $ must be a flow of hypersurfaces in a Euclidean subspace. This extends well-known classification results to higher codimension. The bound on the codimension in terms of the entropy is a special case of sharp bounds for spectral counting functions for shrinkers and, more generally, ancient flows. Shrinkers are solutions that evolve by scaling and are the singularity models for the flow. We show rigidity of cylinders as shrinkers in all dimension and all codimension in a very strong sense: Any shrinker, even in a large dimensional space, that is sufficiently close to a cylinder on a large enough, but compact, set is itself a cylinder. This is an important tool in the theory and is key for regularity; cf. (Colding and Minicozzi II in preprint, 2020).
Date issued
2020-05-15
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/131938
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mathematics
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg

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