In his 1957 paper [1] L. Dubins considered the problem of finding shortest differentiable arcs in the plane with curvature bounded by a constantand prescribed initial and terminal positions and tangents. One can generalize this problem to non-euclidean manifolds as well as to higherdimensions (cf. [15]).
Considering that the boundary data - initial and terminal position and tangents - are genuinely three-dimensional, it seems natural to ask if then-dimensional problem always reduces to the three-dimensional case. In this paper we will prove that this is true in the euclidean as well as inthe noneuclidean case. At first glance one might consider this a trivial problem, but we will also give an example showing that this is not thecase.