In 1841
Delaunay proved that the only
surfaces of revolution with constant mean curvature were the surfaces obtained by rotating the
roulettes of the conics. These are the plane, cylinder, sphere, the
catenoid, the
unduloid and
nodoid. In 1853 J. H. Jellet showed that if S is a compact star-shaped surface in \R^3 with constant mean curvature, then it is the standard sphere. Subsequently,
A. D. Alexandrov proved that a compact embedded surface in \R^3 with constant mean curvature H \neq 0 must be a sphere, and
H. Hopf proved that a sphere immersed in \R^3 with constant mean curvature H \neq 0 must be a standard sphere. Based on this
H. Hopf conjectured in 1956 that any immersed compact orientable constant mean curvature hypersurface in \R^nmust be a standard embedded n-1 sphere. This conjecture was disproven in 1982 by Wu-Yi Hsiang using a counterexample in \R^4. In 1984
Henry C. Wente constructed the
Wente torus, an immersion into \R^3 of a
torus with constant mean curvature. Up until this point it had seemed that CMC surfaces were rare. Using gluing techniques, in 1987
Nikolaos Kapouleas constructed a plethora of examples of complete immersed CMC surfaces in \R^3 with most topological types and at least two ends. Subsequently, Kapouleas constructed compact CMC surfaces in \R^3 with each genus bigger than one. In particular gluing methods appear to allow combining CMC surfaces fairly arbitrarily. Delaunay surfaces can also be combined with immersed "bubbles", retaining their CMC properties. Meeks showed that there are no embedded CMC surfaces with just one end in \R^3. Korevaar, Kusner and Solomon proved that a complete embedded CMC surface will have ends asymptotic to unduloids. Each end carries a n(2\pi-n) "force" along the asymptotic axis of the unduloid (where n is the circumference of the necks), the sum of which must be balanced for the surface to exist. Current work involves classification of families of embedded CMC surfaces in terms of their
moduli spaces. In particular, for k \geq 3 coplanar
k-unduloids of genus 0 satisfy \sum_{i=1}^k n_i \leq (k-1)\pi for odd
k, and \sum_{i=1}^k n_i \leq k\pi for even
k. At most
k − 2 ends can be cylindrical. ==Generation methods==