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This chapter is dedicated to the very special class of constant mean curvature surfaces. A classical result by Thomsen characterizes isothermic Willmore surfaces in 3-space as minimal surfaces in some 3-dimensional space-form. Constant mean curvature surfaces in 3-dimensional space-forms are examples of constrained Willmore surfaces, characterized by the existence of some conserved quantity. Both constrained Willmore spectral deformation and Bäcklund transformation prove to preserve the existence of such a conserved quantity, defining, in particular, transformations within the class of constant mean curvature surfaces in 3-dimensional space-forms, with, furthermore, preservation of both the space-form and the mean curvature, in the latter case. The class of constant mean curvature surfaces in 3-dimensional space-forms lies, in this way, at the intersection of several integrable geometries, with classical transformations of its own, as well as transformations as a class of constrained Willmore surfaces, together with transformations as a subclass of the class of isothermic surfaces, as we explore in this chapter. Constrained Willmore transformation proves to be unifying to this rich transformation theory, as we shall conclude.
From Bäcklund to Darboux, this monograph presents a comprehensive journey through the transformation theory of constrained Willmore surfaces, a topic of great importance in modern differential geometry and, in particular, in the field of integrable systems in Riemannian geometry. The first book on this topic, it discusses in detail a spectral deformation, Bäcklund transformations and Darboux transformations, and proves that all these transformations preserve the existence of a conserved quantity, defining, in particular, transformations within the class of constant mean curvature surfaces in 3-dimensional space-forms, with, furthermore, preservation of both the space-form and the mean curvature, and bridging the gap between different approaches to the subject, classical and modern. Clearly written with extensive references, chapter introductions and self-contained accounts of the core topics, it is suitable for newcomers to the theory of constrained Wilmore surfaces. Many detailed computations and new results unavailable elsewhere in the literature make it also an appealing reference for experts.
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