This document presents a complete and rigorous mathematical theory of the Generalized Amsler Equation (GAE) and corresponfing pseudospherical surfaces with gaussian curvature \ (K=-1\), a one-parameter family of ordinary differential equations arising in the study of pseudospherical surfaces with constant negative Gaussian curvature. We establish: (1) the complete classification of symmetry reductions of the sine-Gordon equation leading to the GAE; (2) the Time-Shared Object (TSO) framework—a four-dimensional parameter space \ (T=\ (, , , ) \\) equipped with a natural Lorentzian metric that geometrically organizes all reductions; (3) the Friendship Theorem, proving that the parameter subspaces corresponding to kink-type reductions (\ (=0\) ) and Amsler-type reductions (\ (==0\) ) are connected by smooth paths in \ (T\), with the linear interpolation \ (P₆₀₄ (s) = (1-s, 1-s, s, 0) \) distinguished as a geodesic—this is a statement about parameter space only and does not imply continuous deformability of the actual solution surfaces; (4) the smooth deformation of solutions along this geodesic governed by the \ (s\) condition \ (ₛ (xₛ) = s\) at the singular point \ (xₛ=- (1-s) ²/s\), connecting the symmetric Amsler surface (\ (s=1/2\) ) to the constant solution \ (\) as \ (s0^+\) and to another degenerate limit as \ (s1^-\), with detailed analysis of non‑uniform convergence and recession/collapse of transition layers; (5) the universality of the inner equation \ (W''+W'= W\) and the smooth dependence of asymptotic constants \ (C₁ (s), C₂ (s) \) on \ (s (0, 1]\), expressed via monodromy data \ ( (s) \) and \ (b_- (s) \) under the axis‑simple normalization \ (=2 () \) ; (6) a complete geometric interpretation of the deformation as motion along a geodesic in the TSO, with the surfaces degenerating to the flat metric \ ( (du-dv) ²\) at both endpoints through distinct mechanisms. All results are presented with complete proofs, and a detailed asymptotic analysis of the GAE—including the connection to monodromy data and rigorous proof of the limit theorems for \ (s0^+\) and \ (s1^-\) —is given in Appendix A. The publication contains all necessary Wolfram Mathematica notbooks for numerical confirmation of given solutions, TSO 3D solution object (the full solution 3D deformation map), pseudospherical surfaces and other coresponding results.
Anton Kalmykov (Sat,) studied this question.
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