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Lecture 2: more singularities and ways to understand them
using gaussian curvature ÒchargeÓ to estimate stretching energy
vanishing mean curvature puzzle
Foppl von Karmann formalism to determine sheet shape
Lobkovsky scaling: strong constraints on ridge shape
Strength and heterogeneity of crumpled sheets
 deformation from within: embedding singularities from nonuniform metric

Estimating stretching energy from gaussian curvature
Numerical representation: Seung-Nelson lattice
d-cone from pushing sheet into container:
rim structure
Curvature cancellation is robust
Experiment shows curvature cancellation
Distant changes alter curvature cancellation
damage: remove bending energy from core region
central force F decreases
curvature cancellation is incomplete
\cancellation uniform elasticity

Known forces constrain rim curvature
What principle underlies the vanishing curvature?
Curvature cancellation conjecture
(When an elastic flat sheet of elastic thickness h is constrained by normal forces that are unbalanced except over distances R >> h, the shape converges pointwise as h/R¨0 to an a developable surface with an uncurved director through every point.  For certain choices of constraint forces, the directors converge to a point, thus forming a developable cone.)
If part of a d-cone is constrained (with nonzero normal force)  to follow a curve that imposes nonzero curvature perpendicular to the director lines, then the Àmean curvature averaged over this curve vanishes when h/R¨0 ? .

Foppl van Karmann equations
reveal new scaling properties
Possible clue to vanishing mean curvature puzzle.

Foppl von Karmann equations dictate the equilibrium shape
Scaling of minimal ridge
Lobkovsky scaling prediction: strong focusing near vertex
Embedding singularities via nonuniform metric
The crumpled state: how strong? how heterogeneous?
Buckling ridges cause crumpling noise
E. Kramer,
A.  Lobkovsky
1996

Buckling cascade accounts for broad crumpling noise
How strong are real crumpled sheets? Mylar experiment
Open questions about the crumpled state
Organization of the ridge network:
Not random.  vertices force each other
characteristic motifs appear.
How chaotic?  if tiny external load is cycled, the ridge network must return to its initial state.  How does this reversibility degrade as the amplitude increases?
How controllable?  Can we control the pressure-volume relation by engineering the material?

Conclusions about embedding singularities
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Gaussian charge optimisation confirms ridge scaling
Stretching energy can be expressed as an integral of gaussian curvature analogous to electrostatic energy.
A stretching ridge has negative gaussian curvature.
It must be compensated by an equal amount of positive gaussian curvature on the adjacent flanks
Optimising the width w of this ÒchargeÓ distribution gives
w ~ X (X/h)-1/3  ,  confirming other methods.

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