Difference between revisions of "Curvature"
m |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | '''Curvature''' is a a number associated with every point on each [[smooth | + | '''Curvature''' is a a number associated with every point on each [[smooth curve]] that describes "how curvy" the curve is at that point. In particular, the "least curvy" curve is a [[line]], and fittingly lines have zero curvature. For a [[circle]] of [[radius]] <math>r</math>, the curvature at every point is <math>\frac{1}{r}</math>. Intuitively, this grows smaller as <math>r</math> grows larger because one must turn much more sharply to follow the path of a circle of small radius than to follow the path of a circle with large radius. |
Given a twice-[[differentiable]] [[function]] <math>f(x)</math>, the curvature of the [[graph]] <math>y = f(x)</math> of the function at the point <math>(x, f(x))</math> is given by the formula | Given a twice-[[differentiable]] [[function]] <math>f(x)</math>, the curvature of the [[graph]] <math>y = f(x)</math> of the function at the point <math>(x, f(x))</math> is given by the formula |
Revision as of 14:40, 11 February 2015
Curvature is a a number associated with every point on each smooth curve that describes "how curvy" the curve is at that point. In particular, the "least curvy" curve is a line, and fittingly lines have zero curvature. For a circle of radius , the curvature at every point is . Intuitively, this grows smaller as grows larger because one must turn much more sharply to follow the path of a circle of small radius than to follow the path of a circle with large radius.
Given a twice-differentiable function , the curvature of the graph of the function at the point is given by the formula
For a curve given in parametric form by the pair , the curvature at a point is
\[\kappa(t) = \?.\] (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)
This expression is invariant under positive-velocity reparametrizations, that is the curvature is a property of the curve and not the way in which you traverse it.
Curvature of surfaces
This article is a stub. Help us out by expanding it.