When does the special Lagrangian equation not produce minimal surfaces?
When does the special Lagrangian equation not produce minimal surfaces?
The special Lagrangian equation is a fully nonlinear, elliptic PDE discovered by Harvey and Lawson in the 1980’s. They showed that if solutions are C^{1,1}, then they correspond to minimal surfaces. Recently, Mooney and Savin constructed Lipschitz viscosity solutions which are not minimal.
When can one rule out such non-minimal solutions? The singular solutions constructed to date are semi-convex. In joint work with Mooney, we find an optimal semi-convexity threshold for viscosity solutions. Above this threshold, there is regularity, and below this threshold, non-minimal solutions show up. The threshold preserves rough solutions under geometric changes of variables. It is also connected to area-decreasing maps, despite those not having a viscosity formulation.