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Energy minimizing maps (E. M. M. s) play a central role in the calculus of variations, partial differential equations (PDEs), and geometric analysis. These maps are often embedded into C^ Riemannian manifolds to minimize the Dirichlet Energy functional under certain prescribed conditions. For understanding physical phenomena where systems naturally evolve to states of minimal energy, the geometric analysis of these maps has provided elucidating insights. This paper explores the geometric and analytic properties of energy minimizing maps, tangent maps, and the singular set (sing (u) ). We begin by establishing key concepts from analysis, including the Sobolev Space W^1, 2 harmonic functions, and Hausdorff dimension. Significant results about the density function, its upper semi-continuity, and the compactness theorem for tangent maps, and theorems for homogeneous degree zero minimizers are presented. Also analyzed in detail is the singular set (sing (u) ), its Hausdorff dimension, and geometric structure. We conclude with open problems that are rich in research potential, and the far-reaching implications if these problems are to be solved.
Owen Drummond (Wed,) studied this question.
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