ABSTRACT

Given a surface embedded in 3D Euclidean space, S → 3 , intrinsically, the surface has four layers of geometric information: topology, conformal structure, Riemannian metric, and embedding, corresponding to four geometries: topology, conformal geometry, Riemannian geometry, and diŠerential geometry for surfaces in 3 . In order to represent the topology, genus and the number of boundaries are required; for conformal geometry, 6g − 6 (or two) parameters are needed to describe the conformal structure of a genus g > 1 surface (or a torus). All genus zero closed surfaces have the same conformal structure. Given the conformal structure of S, a canonical conformal domain of S can be uniquely determined, denoted as DS; for Riemannian geometry, a function de‰ned on the conformal domain λS SD: → is needed to specify the Riemannian metric; and ‰nally, by adding a mean curvature function H DS S: →, the embedding of S in 3 can be determined unique up to a rigid motion. erefore, in order to represent a 3D surface, one needs a ‰nite number of parameters to determine a canonical domain DS, then two functions λ,H de‰ned on the domain. We denote this representation as ( , , ),D HS S Sλ and call it conformal representation.