Yau's conjecture on the first eigenvalue

In mathematics, Yau's conjecture on the first eigenvalue is, as of 2018, an unsolved conjecture proposed by Shing-Tung Yau in 1982. It asks:

If true, it will imply that the area of embedded minimal hypersurfaces in will have an upper bound depending only on the genus.

Some possible reformulations are as follows:

The Yau's conjecture is verified for several special cases, but still open in general.

Shiing-Shen Chern conjectured that a closed, minimally immersed hypersurface in (1), whose second fundamental form has constant length, is isoparametric. If true, it would have established the Yau's conjecture for the minimal hypersurface whose second fundamental form has constant length.

A possible generalization of the Yau's conjecture:

Further reading

  • Yau, S. T. (1982). Seminar on Differential Geometry. Annals of Mathematics Studies. Vol. 102. Princeton University Press. pp. 669–706. ISBN 0-691-08268-5. (Problem 100)
  • Ge, J.; Tang, Z. (2012). "Chern Conjecture and Isoparametric Hypersurfaces". Differential Geometry: Under the influence of S.S. Chern. Beijing: Higher Education Press. ISBN 978-1-57146-249-7.
  • Tang, Z.; Yan, W. (2013). "Isoparametric Foliation and Yau Conjecture on the First Eigenvalue". Journal of Differential Geometry. 94 (3): 521–540. arXiv:1201.0666. doi:10.4310/jdg/1370979337.
Uses material from the Wikipedia article Yau's conjecture on the first eigenvalue, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.