Calculation of
W(
M) for a few examples suggests that there should be a better bound than
W(
M) ≥ 4
π for surfaces with
genus g(
M) > 0. In particular, calculation of
W(
M) for tori with various symmetries led Willmore to propose in 1965 the following conjecture, which now bears his name : For every smooth immersed torus
M in
R3,
W(
M) ≥ 2
π2. In 1982,
Peter Wai-Kwong Li and
Shing-Tung Yau proved the conjecture in the non-embedded case, showing that if f:\Sigma\to S^3 is an immersion of a compact surface, which is
not an embedding, then
W(
M) is at least 8
π. In 2012,
Fernando Codá Marques and
André Neves proved the conjecture in the embedded case, using the
Almgren–Pitts min-max theory of minimal surfaces. Prior to the proof of Marques and Neves, the Willmore conjecture had already been proved for many special cases, such as
tube tori (by Willmore himself), and for
tori of
revolution (by Langer & Singer). ==Further reading==