| PREFACE |
| CHAPTER I. PRELIMINARIES |
| 1. Notation |
| 2. Nature and purpose of differential geometry |
| 3. Concept of mapping. Coordinates in Euclidean space |
| 4. Vectors in Euclidean space |
| 5. Basic rules of vector calculus in Euclidean space |
| CHAPTER II. THEORY OF CURVES |
| 6. The concept of a curve in differential geometry |
| 7. Further remarks on the concept of a curve |
| 8. Examples of special curves |
| 9. Arc length |
| 10. Tangent and normal plane |
| 11. Osculating plane |
| 12. "Principal normal, curvature, osculating circle " |
| 13. Binormal. Moving trihedron of a curve |
| 14. Torsion |
| 15. Formulae of Frenet |
| 16. "Motion of the trihedron, vector of Darboux " |
| 17. Spherical images of a curve |
| 18. Shape of a curve in the neighbourhood of any of its points (canonical representation) |
| 19. "Contact, osculating sphere " |
| 20. Natural equations of a curve |
| 21. Examples of curves and their natural equations |
| 22. Involutes and evolutes |
| 23. Bertrand curves |
| CHAPTER III. CONCEPT OF A SURFACE. FIRST FUNDAMENTAL FORM. FOUNDATIONS OF TENSOR.CALCULUS |
| 24. Concept of a surface in differential geometry |
| 25. "Further remarks on the representation of surfaces, examples " |
| 26. "Curves on a surface, tangent plane to a surface " |
| 27. First fundamental form. Concept of Riemannian geometry. Summation convention |
| 28. Properties of the first fundamental form |
| 29. Contravariant and covariant vectors |
| 30. "Contravariant, covariant, and mixed tensors " |
| 31. Basic rules of tensor calculus |
| 32. Vactors in a surface. The contravariant metric tensor |
| 33. Special tensors |
| 34. Normal to a surface |
| 35. Measurement of lengths and angles in a surface |
| 36. Area |
| 37. Remarks on the definition of area |
| CHAPTER IV. SECOND FUNDAMENTAL FORM. GAUSSIAN AND MEAN CURVATURE OF A SURFACE |
| 38. Second fundamental form |
| 39. Arbitrary and nonnal sections of a surface. Meusnier's theorem. Asymptotic lines |
| 40. "Elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic points of a surface " |
| 41. Principal curvature. Lines of curvature. Gaussian and mean curvature |
| 42. Euler's theorem. Dupin's indicatrix |
| 43. Torus |
| 44. Flat points. Saddle points of higher type |
| 45. Formulae of Weingarten and Gauss |
| 46. Integrability conditions of the formulae of Weingarten and Gauss. Curvature tensors. Theorema. egregium |
| 47. Properties of the Christoffel symbols |
| 48. Umbilics |
| CHAPTER V. GEODESIC CURVATURE AND GEODESICS |
| 49. Geodesic curvature |
| 50. Geodesics |
| 51. Arcs of minimum length |
| 52. Geodesic parallel coordin |
| 53. Geodesic polar coordinates |
| 54. Theorem of Gauss-Bonnet. Integral curvature |
| 55. Application of the Gauss-Bonnet theorem to closed surfaces |
| CHAPTER VI. MAPPINGS |
| 56. Preliminaries |
| 57. Isometric mapping. Bending. Concept of intrinsic geometry of a surface |
| 58. "Ruled surfaces, developable surfaces " |
| 59. Spherical image of a surface. Third fundamental form. Isometric mapping of developable surfaces |
| 60. Conjugate directions. Conjugate families of curves. Developable surfaces contacting a surface. |
| 61. Conformal mapping |
| 62. Conformal mnpping of surfaces into a plane |
| 63. Isotropic curves and isothermic coordinates |
| 64. The Bergman metric |
| 65. Conformal mapping of a sphere into a plane. Stereographic and Mercator projection |
| 66. Equiareal mappings |
| 67. "Equiareal mapping of spheres into planes. Mappings of Lambert, Sanson, and Bonne " |
| 68. Conformal mapping of the Euclidean space |
| CHAPTER VII. ABSOLUTE DIFFERENTIATION AND PARALLEL DISPLACEMENT |
| 69. Concept of absolute differentiation |
| 70. Absolute differentiation of tensors of first order |
| 71. Absolute differentiation of tensors of arbitrary order |
| 72. Further properties of absolute differentiation |
| 73. Interchange of the order of absolute differentiation. The Ricci identity |
| 74. Bianchi identities |
| 75. Differential parameters of Beltrami |
| 76. Definition of the displacement of Levi-Cività |
| 77. Further properties of the displacement of Levi-Cività |
| 78. A more general definition of absolute differentiation and displacement of Levi-Cività |
| CHAPTER VIII. SPECIAL SURFACES |
| 79. Definition and simple properties of minimal surfaces |
| 80. Surfaces of smallest area |
| 81. Examples of minimal surfaces |
| 82. Relations between function theory and minimal surfaces. The formulae of Weierstrass |
| 83. Minimal surfaces as translation surfaces with isotropic generators |
| 84. Modular surfaces of analytic functions |
| 85. Envelope of a one-parameter family of surfaces |
| 86. Developable surfaces as envelopes of families of planes |
| 87. "Envelope of the osculating, normal, and rectifying planes of a curve, polar surface " |
| 88. Centre surfaces of a surface |
| 89. Parallel surfaces |
| 90. Surfaces of constant Gaussian curvature |
| 91. Isometric mapping of surfaces of constant Gaussian curvature |
| 92. Spherical surfaces of revolution |
| 93. Pseudospherical surfaces of revolution |
| 94. Goodesic mapping |
| 95. Geodesic mapping of surfaces of constant Gaussian curvature |
| 96. Surfaces of constant Gaussian curvature and non-Euclidean geometry |
| ANSWERS TO PROBLEMS |
| COLLECTION OF FORMULAE |
| BIBLIOGRAPHY |
| INDEX |