Surface Minkowski tensors to characterize shapes on curved surfaces
Lea Happel
TUD Dresden University of Technology, GermanyHanne Hardering
TUD Dresden University of Technology, GermanySimon Praetorius
TUD Dresden University of Technology, GermanyAxel Voigt
TUD Dresden University of Technology, Germany; Center for Systems Biology Dresden, Germany

Abstract
We introduce surface Minkowski tensors to characterize rotational symmetries of shapes embedded in curved surfaces. The definition is based on a modified vector transport of the shapes’ boundary co-normal to a reference point, which accounts for the angular defect that a classical parallel transport would introduce. This modified transport can be easily implemented for general surfaces and differently defined embedded shapes, and the associated irreducible surface Minkowski tensors give rise to the classification of shapes by their normalized eigenvalues, which are introduced as shape measures following the flat-space analog. We analyze different approximations of the embedded shapes, their influence on the surface Minkowski tensors, and the stability to perturbations of the shape and the surface. The work concludes with a series of numerical experiments showing the applicability of the approach on various surfaces and shape representations and an application in biology in which the characterization of cells in a curved monolayer of cells is considered.
Cite this article
Lea Happel, Hanne Hardering, Simon Praetorius, Axel Voigt, Surface Minkowski tensors to characterize shapes on curved surfaces. Interfaces Free Bound. (2026), published online first
DOI 10.4171/IFB/577