Zoll surface
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In mathematics, particularly in differential geometry, a Zoll surface, named after Otto Zoll, is a surface homeomorphic to the 2-sphere, equipped with a Riemannian metric all of whose geodesics are closed and of equal length. While the usual unit-sphere metric on S2 obviously has this property, it also has an infinite-dimensional family of geometrically distinct deformations that are still Zoll surfaces. In particular, most Zoll surfaces do not have constant curvature.
Zoll, a student of David Hilbert, discovered the first non-trivial examples.
See also
- Funk transform: The original motivation for studying the Funk transform was to describe Zoll metrics on the sphere.
References
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External links
- Tannery's pear, an example of Zoll surface where all closed geodesics (up to the meridians) are shaped like a curved-figure eight.