Variational models describe deformation and stability through the first and second variations in an underlying functional, but the relationship between these responses is seldom expressed as an intrinsic equilibrium quantity of the model itself. A canonical curvature–strain representation for equilibrium ratios arising in variational field settings is developed. For a twice Fréchet differentiable functional and an admissible perturbation generator, strain is defined as normalized first-order response and curvature as normalized second-order response along the generator direction. Their quotient defines a curvature–strain ratio that measures proportional balance between deformation and curvature within the model. The main result shows that this curvature–strain ratio is a canonical representative of a response ratio already implicit in the variational data. Under canonical normalization, the curvature–strain ratio coincides with the quotient of second- and first-order response, and stationarity of the curvature–strain ratio is equivalent to proportional stationarity of that response quotient along the admissible flow. A further theorem establishes transfer of local isolation: when the second-variation operator satisfies standard hypotheses such as compact resolvent and non-degeneracy of the constrained extremum, isolated equilibrium ratios persist in the curvature–strain representation for the same operator-theoretic reasons. Quadratic scalar and Maxwell-type models illustrate the construction. The paper establishes a mathematically controlled curvature–strain representation of equilibrium ratios within ordinary variational theory, with emphasis on the analysis of variational response and equilibrium balance.
Robert Castro (Wed,) studied this question.