While working on a project, I came across a paper that includes this sum on page 15 as the definition of a support function $r$ for a surface with tetrahedral symmetry:
$$ r(ξ, \bar{ξ}) = \frac{1}{\#𝒢} \sum_{g ∈ 𝒢} r_0\bigl(g(ξ), g(\bar{ξ})\bigr) $$
where
- $𝒢$ is "the tetrahedral group", "a discrete subgroup of isometries $𝒢 ⊂ O(3)$";
- $r_0(R) = -\frac{a + b R^2 + (3 - b) R^4 + (1 - a) R^6}{(1 + R^2)^3} + c$ is a rational support function of a 3D surface with rotational symmetry;
- $ξ$ is a complex number, "the local complex coordinate on the unit 2-sphere in $𝔼^3$ obtained by stereographic projection from the south pole"; and
- $a$, $b$, and $c$ are real number parameters that affect the shape and scale of the generated surface.
I am trying to figure out how to evaluate this sum to get an algebraic expression for $r(ξ, \bar{ξ})$. However, I'm currently stuck on the fact that $r_0$ is defined as a single-variable function, yet appears to be called with two input variables.
Am I misreading the notation here? Or is there a convention for how to handle this with which I am unfamiliar?
The sum in this question is found on page 15 of the paper, in Proposition 4.6, and $r_0$ is stated as "being equal to the support function in Example 4.2" from page 13.