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Frenet–Serret formulas

In differential geometry, the Frenet–Serret formulas describe the kinematic properties of a particle moving along a differentiable curve in three-dimensional Euclidean space , or the geometric properties of the curve itself irrespective of any motion. More specifically, the formulas describe the derivatives of the so-called tangent, normal, and binormal unit vectors in terms of each other. The formulas are named after the two French mathematicians who independently discovered them: Jean Frédéric Frenet, in his thesis of 1847, and Joseph Alfred Serret, in 1851. Vector notation and linear algebra currently used to write these formulas were not yet available at the time of their discovery.

A space curve; the vectors T, N and B; and the osculating plane spanned by T and N

The tangent, normal, and binormal unit vectors, often called T, N, and B, or collectively the Frenet–Serret frame or TNB frame, together form an orthonormal basis spanning and are defined as follows:

  • T is the unit vector tangent to the curve, pointing in the direction of motion.
  • N is the normal unit vector, the derivative of T with respect to the arclength parameter of the curve, divided by its length.
  • B is the binormal unit vector, the cross product of T and N.

The Frenet–Serret formulas are:

where d/ds is the derivative with respect to arclength, κ is the curvature, and τ is the torsion of the curve. The two scalars κ and τ effectively define the curvature and torsion of a space curve. The associated collection, T, N, B, κ, and τ, is called the Frenet–Serret apparatus. Intuitively, curvature measures the failure of a curve to be a straight line, while torsion measures the failure of a curve to be planar.

Definitions edit

 
The T and N vectors at two points on a plane curve, a translated version of the second frame (dotted), and the change in T: δT'. δs is the distance between the points. In the limit   will be in the direction N and the curvature describes the speed of rotation of the frame.

Let r(t) be a curve in Euclidean space, representing the position vector of the particle as a function of time. The Frenet–Serret formulas apply to curves which are non-degenerate, which roughly means that they have nonzero curvature. More formally, in this situation the velocity vector r′(t) and the acceleration vector r′′(t) are required not to be proportional.

Let s(t) represent the arc length which the particle has moved along the curve in time t. The quantity s is used to give the curve traced out by the trajectory of the particle a natural parametrization by arc length (i.e. arc-length parametrization), since many different particle paths may trace out the same geometrical curve by traversing it at different rates. In detail, s is given by

 

Moreover, since we have assumed that r′ ≠ 0, it follows that s(t) is a strictly monotonically increasing function. Therefore, it is possible to solve for t as a function of s, and thus to write r(s) = r(t(s)). The curve is thus parametrized in a preferred manner by its arc length.

With a non-degenerate curve r(s), parameterized by its arc length, it is now possible to define the Frenet–Serret frame (or TNB frame):

  • The tangent unit vector T is defined as
     
  • The normal unit vector N is defined as
     
    from which it follows, since T always has unit magnitude, that N (the change of T) is always perpendicular to T, since there is no change in length of T. Note that by calling curvature   we automatically obtain the first relation.
  • The binormal unit vector B is defined as the cross product of T and N:
     
 
The Frenet–Serret frame moving along a helix. The T is represented by the blue arrow, N is represented by the red arrow while B is represented by the black arrow.

from which it follows that B is always perpendicular to both T and N. Thus, the three unit vectors T, N, and B are all perpendicular to each other.

The Frenet–Serret formulas are:

 

where   is the curvature and   is the torsion.

The Frenet–Serret formulas are also known as Frenet–Serret theorem, and can be stated more concisely using matrix notation:[1]

 

This matrix is skew-symmetric.

Formulas in n dimensions edit

The Frenet–Serret formulas were generalized to higher-dimensional Euclidean spaces by Camille Jordan in 1874.

Suppose that r(s) is a smooth curve in  , and that the first n derivatives of r are linearly independent.[2] The vectors in the Frenet–Serret frame are an orthonormal basis constructed by applying the Gram-Schmidt process to the vectors (r′(s), r′′(s), ..., r(n)(s)).

In detail, the unit tangent vector is the first Frenet vector e1(s) and is defined as

 

where

 

The normal vector, sometimes called the curvature vector, indicates the deviance of the curve from being a straight line. It is defined as

 

Its normalized form, the unit normal vector, is the second Frenet vector e2(s) and defined as

 

The tangent and the normal vector at point s define the osculating plane at point r(s).

The remaining vectors in the frame (the binormal, trinormal, etc.) are defined similarly by

 
 

The last vector in the frame is defined by the cross-product of the first   vectors:

 

The real valued functions used below χi(s) are called generalized curvature and are defined as

 

The Frenet–Serret formulas, stated in matrix language, are

 

Notice that as defined here, the generalized curvatures and the frame may differ slightly from the convention found in other sources. The top curvature   (also called the torsion, in this context) and the last vector in the frame  , differ by a sign

 

(the orientation of the basis) from the usual torsion. The Frenet–Serret formulas are invariant under flipping the sign of both   and  , and this change of sign makes the frame positively oriented. As defined above, the frame inherits its orientation from the jet of  .

Proof edit

Consider the 3 by 3 matrix

 

The rows of this matrix are mutually perpendicular unit vectors: an orthonormal basis of  . As a result, the transpose of Q is equal to the inverse of Q: Q is an orthogonal matrix. It suffices to show that

 

Note the first row of this equation already holds, by definition of the normal N and curvature κ, as well as the last row by the definition of torsion. So it suffices to show that dQ/dsQT is a skew-symmetric matrix. Since I = QQT, taking a derivative and applying the product rule yields

 

which establishes the required skew-symmetry.[3]

Applications and interpretation edit

Kinematics of the frame edit

 
The Frenet–Serret frame moving along a helix in space

The Frenet–Serret frame consisting of the tangent T, normal N, and binormal B collectively forms an orthonormal basis of 3-space. At each point of the curve, this attaches a frame of reference or rectilinear coordinate system (see image).

The Frenet–Serret formulas admit a kinematic interpretation. Imagine that an observer moves along the curve in time, using the attached frame at each point as their coordinate system. The Frenet–Serret formulas mean that this coordinate system is constantly rotating as an observer moves along the curve. Hence, this coordinate system is always non-inertial. The angular momentum of the observer's coordinate system is proportional to the Darboux vector of the frame.

 
A top whose axis is situated along the binormal is observed to rotate with angular speed κ. If the axis is along the tangent, it is observed to rotate with angular speed τ.

Concretely, suppose that the observer carries an (inertial) top (or gyroscope) with them along the curve. If the axis of the top points along the tangent to the curve, then it will be observed to rotate about its axis with angular velocity -τ relative to the observer's non-inertial coordinate system. If, on the other hand, the axis of the top points in the binormal direction, then it is observed to rotate with angular velocity -κ. This is easily visualized in the case when the curvature is a positive constant and the torsion vanishes. The observer is then in uniform circular motion. If the top points in the direction of the binormal, then by conservation of angular momentum it must rotate in the opposite direction of the circular motion. In the limiting case when the curvature vanishes, the observer's normal precesses about the tangent vector, and similarly the top will rotate in the opposite direction of this precession.

The general case is illustrated below. There are further illustrations on Wikimedia.

Applications edit

The kinematics of the frame have many applications in the sciences.

  • In the life sciences, particularly in models of microbial motion, considerations of the Frenet–Serret frame have been used to explain the mechanism by which a moving organism in a viscous medium changes its direction.[4]
  • In physics, the Frenet–Serret frame is useful when it is impossible or inconvenient to assign a natural coordinate system for a trajectory. Such is often the case, for instance, in relativity theory. Within this setting, Frenet–Serret frames have been used to model the precession of a gyroscope in a gravitational well.[5]

Graphical Illustrations edit

  1. Example of a moving Frenet basis (T in blue, N in green, B in purple) along Viviani's curve.

 

  1. On the example of a torus knot, the tangent vector T, the normal vector N, and the binormal vector B, along with the curvature κ(s), and the torsion τ(s) are displayed.
    At the peaks of the torsion function the rotation of the Frenet–Serret frame (T,N,B) around the tangent vector is clearly visible.

 

  1. The kinematic significance of the curvature is best illustrated with plane curves (having constant torsion equal to zero). See the page on curvature of plane curves.

Frenet–Serret formulas in calculus edit

The Frenet–Serret formulas are frequently introduced in courses on multivariable calculus as a companion to the study of space curves such as the helix. A helix can be characterized by the height 2πh and radius r of a single turn. The curvature and torsion of a helix (with constant radius) are given by the formulas

 
 
 
Two helices (slinkies) in space. (a) A more compact helix with higher curvature and lower torsion. (b) A stretched out helix with slightly higher torsion but lower curvature.

The sign of the torsion is determined by the right-handed or left-handed sense in which the helix twists around its central axis. Explicitly, the parametrization of a single turn of a right-handed helix with height 2πh and radius r is

x = r cos t
y = r sin t
z = h t
(0 ≤ t ≤ 2 π)

and, for a left-handed helix,

x = r cos t
y = −r sin t
z = h t
(0 ≤ t ≤ 2 π).

Note that these are not the arc length parametrizations (in which case, each of x, y, and z would need to be divided by  .)

In his expository writings on the geometry of curves, Rudy Rucker[6] employs the model of a slinky to explain the meaning of the torsion and curvature. The slinky, he says, is characterized by the property that the quantity

 

remains constant if the slinky is vertically stretched out along its central axis. (Here 2πh is the height of a single twist of the slinky, and r the radius.) In particular, curvature and torsion are complementary in the sense that the torsion can be increased at the expense of curvature by stretching out the slinky.

Taylor expansion edit

Repeatedly differentiating the curve and applying the Frenet–Serret formulas gives the following Taylor approximation to the curve near s = 0:[7]

 

For a generic curve with nonvanishing torsion, the projection of the curve onto various coordinate planes in the T, N, B coordinate system at s = 0 have the following interpretations:

  • The osculating plane is the plane containing T and N. The projection of the curve onto this plane has the form:
     
    This is a parabola up to terms of order o(s2), whose curvature at 0 is equal to κ(0).
  • The normal plane is the plane containing N and B. The projection of the curve onto this plane has the form:
     
    which is a cuspidal cubic to order o(s3).
  • The rectifying plane is the plane containing T and B. The projection of the curve onto this plane is:
     
    which traces out the graph of a cubic polynomial to order o(s3).

Ribbons and tubes edit

 
A ribbon defined by a curve of constant torsion and a highly oscillating curvature. The arc length parameterization of the curve was defined via integration of the Frenet–Serret equations.

The Frenet–Serret apparatus allows one to define certain optimal ribbons and tubes centered around a curve. These have diverse applications in materials science and elasticity theory,[8] as well as to computer graphics.[9]

The Frenet ribbon[10] along a curve C is the surface traced out by sweeping the line segment [−N,N] generated by the unit normal along the curve. This surface is sometimes confused with the tangent developable, which is the envelope E of the osculating planes of C. This is perhaps because both the Frenet ribbon and E exhibit similar properties along C. Namely, the tangent planes of both sheets of E, near the singular locus C where these sheets intersect, approach the osculating planes of C; the tangent planes of the Frenet ribbon along C are equal to these osculating planes. The Frenet ribbon is in general not developable.

Congruence of curves edit

In classical Euclidean geometry, one is interested in studying the properties of figures in the plane which are invariant under congruence, so that if two figures are congruent then they must have the same properties. The Frenet–Serret apparatus presents the curvature and torsion as numerical invariants of a space curve.

Roughly speaking, two curves C and C′ in space are congruent if one can be rigidly moved to the other. A rigid motion consists of a combination of a translation and a rotation. A translation moves one point of C to a point of C′. The rotation then adjusts the orientation of the curve C to line up with that of C′. Such a combination of translation and rotation is called a Euclidean motion. In terms of the parametrization r(t) defining the first curve C, a general Euclidean motion of C is a composite of the following operations:

  • (Translation) r(t) → r(t) + v, where v is a constant vector.
  • (Rotation) r(t) + vM(r(t) + v), where M is the matrix of a rotation.

The Frenet–Serret frame is particularly well-behaved with regard to Euclidean motions. First, since T, N, and B can all be given as successive derivatives of the parametrization of the curve, each of them is insensitive to the addition of a constant vector to r(t). Intuitively, the TNB frame attached to r(t) is the same as the TNB frame attached to the new curve r(t) + v.

This leaves only the rotations to consider. Intuitively, if we apply a rotation M to the curve, then the TNB frame also rotates. More precisely, the matrix Q whose rows are the TNB vectors of the Frenet–Serret frame changes by the matrix of a rotation

 

A fortiori, the matrix dQ/dsQT is unaffected by a rotation:

 

since MMT = I for the matrix of a rotation.

Hence the entries κ and τ of dQ/dsQT are invariants of the curve under Euclidean motions: if a Euclidean motion is applied to a curve, then the resulting curve has the same curvature and torsion.

Moreover, using the Frenet–Serret frame, one can also prove the converse: any two curves having the same curvature and torsion functions must be congruent by a Euclidean motion. Roughly speaking, the Frenet–Serret formulas express the Darboux derivative of the TNB frame. If the Darboux derivatives of two frames are equal, then a version of the fundamental theorem of calculus asserts that the curves are congruent. In particular, the curvature and torsion are a complete set of invariants for a curve in three-dimensions.

Other expressions of the frame edit

The formulas given above for T, N, and B depend on the curve being given in terms of the arclength parameter. This is a natural assumption in Euclidean geometry, because the arclength is a Euclidean invariant of the curve. In the terminology of physics, the arclength parametrization is a natural choice of gauge. However, it may be awkward to work with in practice. A number of other equivalent expressions are available.

Suppose that the curve is given by r(t), where the parameter t need no longer be arclength. Then the unit tangent vector T may be written as

 

The normal vector N takes the form

 

The binormal B is then

 

An alternative way to arrive at the same expressions is to take the first three derivatives of the curve r′(t), r′′(t), r′′′(t), and to apply the Gram-Schmidt process. The resulting ordered orthonormal basis is precisely the TNB frame. This procedure also generalizes to produce Frenet frames in higher dimensions.

In terms of the parameter t, the Frenet–Serret formulas pick up an additional factor of ||r′(t)|| because of the chain rule:

 

Explicit expressions for the curvature and torsion may be computed. For example,

 

The torsion may be expressed using a scalar triple product as follows,

 

Special cases edit

If the curvature is always zero then the curve will be a straight line. Here the vectors N, B and the torsion are not well defined.

If the torsion is always zero then the curve will lie in a plane.

A curve may have nonzero curvature and zero torsion. For example, the circle of radius R given by r(t)=(R cos t, R sin t, 0) in the z=0 plane has zero torsion and curvature equal to 1/R. The converse, however, is false. That is, a regular curve with nonzero torsion must have nonzero curvature. (This is just the contrapositive of the fact that zero curvature implies zero torsion.)

A helix has constant curvature and constant torsion.

Plane curves edit

Given a curve contained on the x-y plane, its tangent vector T is also contained on that plane. Its binormal vector B can be naturally postulated to coincide with the normal to the plane (along the z axis). Finally, the curve normal can be found completing the right-handed system, N = B × T.[11] This form is well-defined even when the curvature is zero; for example, the normal to a straight line in a plane will be perpendicular to the tangent, all co-planar.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kühnel 2002, §1.9
  2. ^ Only the first n − 1 actually need to be linearly independent, as the final remaining frame vector en can be chosen as the unit vector orthogonal to the span of the others, such that the resulting frame is positively oriented.
  3. ^ This proof is likely due to Élie Cartan. See Griffiths (1974) where he gives the same proof, but using the Maurer-Cartan form. Our explicit description of the Maurer-Cartan form using matrices is standard. See, for instance, Spivak, Volume II, p. 37. A generalization of this proof to n dimensions is not difficult, but was omitted for the sake of exposition. Again, see Griffiths (1974) for details.
  4. ^ Crenshaw (1993).
  5. ^ Iyer and Vishveshwara (1993).
  6. ^ Rucker, Rudy (1999). . San Jose State University. Archived from the original on 15 October 2004.
  7. ^ Kühnel 2002, p. 19
  8. ^ Goriely et al. (2006).
  9. ^ Hanson.
  10. ^ For terminology, see Sternberg (1964). Lectures on Differential Geometry. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. p. 252-254. ISBN 9780135271506..
  11. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Normal Vector". MathWorld. Wolfram.

References edit

  • Crenshaw, H.C.; Edelstein-Keshet, L. (1993), "Orientation by Helical Motion II. Changing the direction of the axis of motion", Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, 55 (1): 213–230, doi:10.1016/s0092-8240(05)80070-9, S2CID 50734771
  • Etgen, Garret; Hille, Einar; Salas, Saturnino (1995), Salas and Hille's Calculus — One and Several Variables (7th ed.), John Wiley & Sons, p. 896
  • Frenet, F. (1847), Sur les courbes à double courbure (PDF), Thèse, Toulouse. Abstract in Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées 17, 1852.
  • Goriely, A.; Robertson-Tessi, M.; Tabor, M.; Vandiver, R. (2006), "Elastic growth models", (PDF), Springer-Verlag, archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-12-29.
  • Griffiths, Phillip (1974), "On Cartan's method of Lie groups and moving frames as applied to uniqueness and existence questions in differential geometry", Duke Mathematical Journal, 41 (4): 775–814, doi:10.1215/S0012-7094-74-04180-5, S2CID 12966544.
  • Guggenheimer, Heinrich (1977), Differential Geometry, Dover, ISBN 0-486-63433-7
  • Hanson, A.J. (2007), "Quaternion Frenet Frames: Making Optimal Tubes and Ribbons from Curves" (PDF), Indiana University Technical Report
  • Iyer, B.R.; Vishveshwara, C.V. (1993), "Frenet-Serret description of gyroscopic precession", Phys. Rev., D, 48 (12): 5706–5720, arXiv:gr-qc/9310019, Bibcode:1993PhRvD..48.5706I, doi:10.1103/physrevd.48.5706, PMID 10016237, S2CID 119458843
  • Jordan, Camille (1874), "Sur la théorie des courbes dans l'espace à n dimensions", C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris, 79: 795–797
  • Kühnel, Wolfgang (2002), Differential geometry, Student Mathematical Library, vol. 16, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-2656-0, MR 1882174
  • Serret, J. A. (1851), "Sur quelques formules relatives à la théorie des courbes à double courbure" (PDF), Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées, 16.
  • Spivak, Michael (1999), A Comprehensive Introduction to Differential Geometry (Volume Two), Publish or Perish, Inc..
  • Sternberg, Shlomo (1964), Lectures on Differential Geometry, Prentice-Hall
  • Struik, Dirk J. (1961), Lectures on Classical Differential Geometry, Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley.

External links edit

  • Create your own animated illustrations of moving Frenet-Serret frames, curvature and torsion functions (Maple Worksheet)
  • .
  • Very nice visual representation for the trihedron

frenet, serret, formulas, binormal, redirects, here, category, theoretic, meaning, this, word, normal, morphism, differential, geometry, describe, kinematic, properties, particle, moving, along, differentiable, curve, three, dimensional, euclidean, space, disp. Binormal redirects here For the category theoretic meaning of this word see normal morphism In differential geometry the Frenet Serret formulas describe the kinematic properties of a particle moving along a differentiable curve in three dimensional Euclidean space R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 or the geometric properties of the curve itself irrespective of any motion More specifically the formulas describe the derivatives of the so called tangent normal and binormal unit vectors in terms of each other The formulas are named after the two French mathematicians who independently discovered them Jean Frederic Frenet in his thesis of 1847 and Joseph Alfred Serret in 1851 Vector notation and linear algebra currently used to write these formulas were not yet available at the time of their discovery A space curve the vectors T N and B and the osculating plane spanned by T and NThe tangent normal and binormal unit vectors often called T N and B or collectively the Frenet Serret frame or TNB frame together form an orthonormal basis spanning R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 and are defined as follows T is the unit vector tangent to the curve pointing in the direction of motion N is the normal unit vector the derivative of T with respect to the arclength parameter of the curve divided by its length B is the binormal unit vector the cross product of T and N The Frenet Serret formulas are d T d s k N d N d s k T t B d B d s t N displaystyle begin aligned frac mathrm d mathbf T mathrm d s amp kappa mathbf N frac mathrm d mathbf N mathrm d s amp kappa mathbf T tau mathbf B frac mathrm d mathbf B mathrm d s amp tau mathbf N end aligned where d ds is the derivative with respect to arclength k is the curvature and t is the torsion of the curve The two scalars k and t effectively define the curvature and torsion of a space curve The associated collection T N B k and t is called the Frenet Serret apparatus Intuitively curvature measures the failure of a curve to be a straight line while torsion measures the failure of a curve to be planar Contents 1 Definitions 2 Formulas in n dimensions 3 Proof 4 Applications and interpretation 4 1 Kinematics of the frame 4 1 1 Applications 4 1 2 Graphical Illustrations 4 2 Frenet Serret formulas in calculus 4 3 Taylor expansion 4 4 Ribbons and tubes 4 5 Congruence of curves 5 Other expressions of the frame 6 Special cases 6 1 Plane curves 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksDefinitions edit nbsp The T and N vectors at two points on a plane curve a translated version of the second frame dotted and the change in T dT ds is the distance between the points In the limit d T d s displaystyle tfrac d mathbf T ds nbsp will be in the direction N and the curvature describes the speed of rotation of the frame Let r t be a curve in Euclidean space representing the position vector of the particle as a function of time The Frenet Serret formulas apply to curves which are non degenerate which roughly means that they have nonzero curvature More formally in this situation the velocity vector r t and the acceleration vector r t are required not to be proportional Let s t represent the arc length which the particle has moved along the curve in time t The quantity s is used to give the curve traced out by the trajectory of the particle a natural parametrization by arc length i e arc length parametrization since many different particle paths may trace out the same geometrical curve by traversing it at different rates In detail s is given by s t 0 t r s d s displaystyle s t int 0 t left mathbf r sigma right d sigma nbsp Moreover since we have assumed that r 0 it follows that s t is a strictly monotonically increasing function Therefore it is possible to solve for t as a function of s and thus to write r s r t s The curve is thus parametrized in a preferred manner by its arc length With a non degenerate curve r s parameterized by its arc length it is now possible to define the Frenet Serret frame or TNB frame The tangent unit vector T is defined as T d r d s displaystyle mathbf T frac mathrm d mathbf r mathrm d s nbsp The normal unit vector N is defined as N d T d s d T d s displaystyle mathbf N frac mathrm d mathbf T mathrm d s over left frac mathrm d mathbf T mathrm d s right nbsp from which it follows since T always has unit magnitude that N the change of T is always perpendicular to T since there is no change in length of T Note that by calling curvature k d T d s displaystyle kappa left frac mathrm d mathbf T mathrm d s right nbsp we automatically obtain the first relation The binormal unit vector B is defined as the cross product of T and N B T N displaystyle mathbf B mathbf T times mathbf N nbsp nbsp The Frenet Serret frame moving along a helix The T is represented by the blue arrow N is represented by the red arrow while B is represented by the black arrow from which it follows that B is always perpendicular to both T and N Thus the three unit vectors T N and B are all perpendicular to each other The Frenet Serret formulas are d T d s k N d N d s k T t B d B d s t N displaystyle begin aligned frac mathrm d mathbf T mathrm d s amp kappa mathbf N frac mathrm d mathbf N mathrm d s amp kappa mathbf T tau mathbf B frac mathrm d mathbf B mathrm d s amp tau mathbf N end aligned nbsp where k displaystyle kappa nbsp is the curvature and t displaystyle tau nbsp is the torsion The Frenet Serret formulas are also known as Frenet Serret theorem and can be stated more concisely using matrix notation 1 T N B 0 k 0 k 0 t 0 t 0 T N B displaystyle begin bmatrix mathbf T mathbf N mathbf B end bmatrix begin bmatrix 0 amp kappa amp 0 kappa amp 0 amp tau 0 amp tau amp 0 end bmatrix begin bmatrix mathbf T mathbf N mathbf B end bmatrix nbsp This matrix is skew symmetric Formulas in n dimensions editThe Frenet Serret formulas were generalized to higher dimensional Euclidean spaces by Camille Jordan in 1874 Suppose that r s is a smooth curve in R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp and that the first n derivatives of r are linearly independent 2 The vectors in the Frenet Serret frame are an orthonormal basis constructed by applying the Gram Schmidt process to the vectors r s r s r n s In detail the unit tangent vector is the first Frenet vector e1 s and is defined as e 1 s e 1 s e 1 s displaystyle mathbf e 1 s frac overline mathbf e 1 s overline mathbf e 1 s nbsp where e 1 s r s displaystyle overline mathbf e 1 s mathbf r s nbsp The normal vector sometimes called the curvature vector indicates the deviance of the curve from being a straight line It is defined as e 2 s r s r s e 1 s e 1 s displaystyle overline mathbf e 2 s mathbf r s langle mathbf r s mathbf e 1 s rangle mathbf e 1 s nbsp Its normalized form the unit normal vector is the second Frenet vector e2 s and defined as e 2 s e 2 s e 2 s displaystyle mathbf e 2 s frac overline mathbf e 2 s overline mathbf e 2 s nbsp The tangent and the normal vector at point s define the osculating plane at point r s The remaining vectors in the frame the binormal trinormal etc are defined similarly by e j s e j s e j s displaystyle begin aligned mathbf e j s frac overline mathbf e j s overline mathbf e j s mbox end aligned nbsp e j s r j s i 1 j 1 r j s e i s e i s displaystyle begin aligned overline mathbf e j s mathbf r j s sum i 1 j 1 langle mathbf r j s mathbf e i s rangle mathbf e i s end aligned nbsp The last vector in the frame is defined by the cross product of the first n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp vectors e n s e 1 s e 2 s e n 2 s e n 1 s displaystyle mathbf e n s mathbf e 1 s times mathbf e 2 s times dots times mathbf e n 2 s times mathbf e n 1 s nbsp The real valued functions used below xi s are called generalized curvature and are defined as x i s e i s e i 1 s r s displaystyle chi i s frac langle mathbf e i s mathbf e i 1 s rangle mathbf r s nbsp The Frenet Serret formulas stated in matrix language are e 1 s e n s r s 0 x 1 s 0 x 1 s 0 x n 1 s 0 x n 1 s 0 e 1 s e n s displaystyle begin aligned begin bmatrix mathbf e 1 s vdots mathbf e n s end bmatrix end aligned mathbf r s cdot begin aligned begin bmatrix 0 amp chi 1 s amp amp 0 chi 1 s amp ddots amp ddots amp amp ddots amp 0 amp chi n 1 s 0 amp amp chi n 1 s amp 0 end bmatrix begin bmatrix mathbf e 1 s vdots mathbf e n s end bmatrix end aligned nbsp Notice that as defined here the generalized curvatures and the frame may differ slightly from the convention found in other sources The top curvature x n 1 displaystyle chi n 1 nbsp also called the torsion in this context and the last vector in the frame e n displaystyle mathbf e n nbsp differ by a sign or r 1 r n displaystyle operatorname or left mathbf r 1 dots mathbf r n right nbsp the orientation of the basis from the usual torsion The Frenet Serret formulas are invariant under flipping the sign of both x n 1 displaystyle chi n 1 nbsp and e n displaystyle mathbf e n nbsp and this change of sign makes the frame positively oriented As defined above the frame inherits its orientation from the jet of r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp Proof editConsider the 3 by 3 matrix Q T N B displaystyle Q begin bmatrix mathbf T mathbf N mathbf B end bmatrix nbsp The rows of this matrix are mutually perpendicular unit vectors an orthonormal basis of R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 nbsp As a result the transpose of Q is equal to the inverse of Q Q is an orthogonal matrix It suffices to show that d Q d s Q 0 k 0 k 0 t 0 t 0 displaystyle left frac dQ ds right Q top begin bmatrix 0 amp kappa amp 0 kappa amp 0 amp tau 0 amp tau amp 0 end bmatrix nbsp Note the first row of this equation already holds by definition of the normal N and curvature k as well as the last row by the definition of torsion So it suffices to show that dQ ds QT is a skew symmetric matrix Since I QQT taking a derivative and applying the product rule yields 0 d I d s d Q d s Q Q d Q d s d Q d s Q d Q d s Q displaystyle begin aligned 0 frac mathrm d I mathrm d s left frac mathrm d Q mathrm d s right Q top Q left frac mathrm d Q mathrm d s right top implies left frac mathrm d Q mathrm d s right Q top left left frac mathrm d Q mathrm d s right Q top right top end aligned nbsp which establishes the required skew symmetry 3 Applications and interpretation editKinematics of the frame edit nbsp The Frenet Serret frame moving along a helix in spaceThe Frenet Serret frame consisting of the tangent T normal N and binormal B collectively forms an orthonormal basis of 3 space At each point of the curve this attaches a frame of reference or rectilinear coordinate system see image The Frenet Serret formulas admit a kinematic interpretation Imagine that an observer moves along the curve in time using the attached frame at each point as their coordinate system The Frenet Serret formulas mean that this coordinate system is constantly rotating as an observer moves along the curve Hence this coordinate system is always non inertial The angular momentum of the observer s coordinate system is proportional to the Darboux vector of the frame nbsp A top whose axis is situated along the binormal is observed to rotate with angular speed k If the axis is along the tangent it is observed to rotate with angular speed t Concretely suppose that the observer carries an inertial top or gyroscope with them along the curve If the axis of the top points along the tangent to the curve then it will be observed to rotate about its axis with angular velocity t relative to the observer s non inertial coordinate system If on the other hand the axis of the top points in the binormal direction then it is observed to rotate with angular velocity k This is easily visualized in the case when the curvature is a positive constant and the torsion vanishes The observer is then in uniform circular motion If the top points in the direction of the binormal then by conservation of angular momentum it must rotate in the opposite direction of the circular motion In the limiting case when the curvature vanishes the observer s normal precesses about the tangent vector and similarly the top will rotate in the opposite direction of this precession The general case is illustrated below There are further illustrations on Wikimedia Applications edit The kinematics of the frame have many applications in the sciences In the life sciences particularly in models of microbial motion considerations of the Frenet Serret frame have been used to explain the mechanism by which a moving organism in a viscous medium changes its direction 4 In physics the Frenet Serret frame is useful when it is impossible or inconvenient to assign a natural coordinate system for a trajectory Such is often the case for instance in relativity theory Within this setting Frenet Serret frames have been used to model the precession of a gyroscope in a gravitational well 5 Graphical Illustrations edit Example of a moving Frenet basis T in blue N in green B in purple along Viviani s curve nbsp On the example of a torus knot the tangent vector T the normal vector N and the binormal vector B along with the curvature k s and the torsion t s are displayed At the peaks of the torsion function the rotation of the Frenet Serret frame T N B around the tangent vector is clearly visible nbsp The kinematic significance of the curvature is best illustrated with plane curves having constant torsion equal to zero See the page on curvature of plane curves Frenet Serret formulas in calculus edit The Frenet Serret formulas are frequently introduced in courses on multivariable calculus as a companion to the study of space curves such as the helix A helix can be characterized by the height 2ph and radius r of a single turn The curvature and torsion of a helix with constant radius are given by the formulas k r r 2 h 2 displaystyle kappa frac r r 2 h 2 nbsp t h r 2 h 2 displaystyle tau pm frac h r 2 h 2 nbsp nbsp Two helices slinkies in space a A more compact helix with higher curvature and lower torsion b A stretched out helix with slightly higher torsion but lower curvature The sign of the torsion is determined by the right handed or left handed sense in which the helix twists around its central axis Explicitly the parametrization of a single turn of a right handed helix with height 2ph and radius r is x r cos t y r sin t z h t 0 t 2 p and for a left handed helix x r cos t y r sin t z h t 0 t 2 p Note that these are not the arc length parametrizations in which case each of x y and z would need to be divided by h 2 r 2 displaystyle sqrt h 2 r 2 nbsp In his expository writings on the geometry of curves Rudy Rucker 6 employs the model of a slinky to explain the meaning of the torsion and curvature The slinky he says is characterized by the property that the quantity A 2 h 2 r 2 displaystyle A 2 h 2 r 2 nbsp remains constant if the slinky is vertically stretched out along its central axis Here 2ph is the height of a single twist of the slinky and r the radius In particular curvature and torsion are complementary in the sense that the torsion can be increased at the expense of curvature by stretching out the slinky Taylor expansion edit Repeatedly differentiating the curve and applying the Frenet Serret formulas gives the following Taylor approximation to the curve near s 0 7 r s r 0 s s 3 k 2 0 6 T 0 s 2 k 0 2 s 3 k 0 6 N 0 s 3 k 0 t 0 6 B 0 o s 4 displaystyle mathbf r s mathbf r 0 left s frac s 3 kappa 2 0 6 right mathbf T 0 left frac s 2 kappa 0 2 frac s 3 kappa 0 6 right mathbf N 0 left frac s 3 kappa 0 tau 0 6 right mathbf B 0 o s 4 nbsp For a generic curve with nonvanishing torsion the projection of the curve onto various coordinate planes in the T N B coordinate system at s 0 have the following interpretations The osculating plane is the plane containing T and N The projection of the curve onto this plane has the form r 0 s T 0 s 2 k 0 2 N 0 o s 2 displaystyle mathbf r 0 s mathbf T 0 frac s 2 kappa 0 2 mathbf N 0 o s 2 nbsp This is a parabola up to terms of order o s2 whose curvature at 0 is equal to k 0 The normal plane is the plane containing N and B The projection of the curve onto this plane has the form r 0 s 2 k 0 2 s 3 k 0 6 N 0 s 3 k 0 t 0 6 B 0 o s 3 displaystyle mathbf r 0 left frac s 2 kappa 0 2 frac s 3 kappa 0 6 right mathbf N 0 left frac s 3 kappa 0 tau 0 6 right mathbf B 0 o s 3 nbsp which is a cuspidal cubic to order o s3 The rectifying plane is the plane containing T and B The projection of the curve onto this plane is r 0 s s 3 k 2 0 6 T 0 s 3 k 0 t 0 6 B 0 o s 3 displaystyle mathbf r 0 left s frac s 3 kappa 2 0 6 right mathbf T 0 left frac s 3 kappa 0 tau 0 6 right mathbf B 0 o s 3 nbsp which traces out the graph of a cubic polynomial to order o s3 Ribbons and tubes edit nbsp A ribbon defined by a curve of constant torsion and a highly oscillating curvature The arc length parameterization of the curve was defined via integration of the Frenet Serret equations The Frenet Serret apparatus allows one to define certain optimal ribbons and tubes centered around a curve These have diverse applications in materials science and elasticity theory 8 as well as to computer graphics 9 The Frenet ribbon 10 along a curve C is the surface traced out by sweeping the line segment N N generated by the unit normal along the curve This surface is sometimes confused with the tangent developable which is the envelope E of the osculating planes of C This is perhaps because both the Frenet ribbon and E exhibit similar properties along C Namely the tangent planes of both sheets of E near the singular locus C where these sheets intersect approach the osculating planes of C the tangent planes of the Frenet ribbon along C are equal to these osculating planes The Frenet ribbon is in general not developable Congruence of curves edit In classical Euclidean geometry one is interested in studying the properties of figures in the plane which are invariant under congruence so that if two figures are congruent then they must have the same properties The Frenet Serret apparatus presents the curvature and torsion as numerical invariants of a space curve Roughly speaking two curves C and C in space are congruent if one can be rigidly moved to the other A rigid motion consists of a combination of a translation and a rotation A translation moves one point of C to a point of C The rotation then adjusts the orientation of the curve C to line up with that of C Such a combination of translation and rotation is called a Euclidean motion In terms of the parametrization r t defining the first curve C a general Euclidean motion of C is a composite of the following operations Translation r t r t v where v is a constant vector Rotation r t v M r t v where M is the matrix of a rotation The Frenet Serret frame is particularly well behaved with regard to Euclidean motions First since T N and B can all be given as successive derivatives of the parametrization of the curve each of them is insensitive to the addition of a constant vector to r t Intuitively the TNB frame attached to r t is the same as the TNB frame attached to the new curve r t v This leaves only the rotations to consider Intuitively if we apply a rotation M to the curve then the TNB frame also rotates More precisely the matrix Q whose rows are the TNB vectors of the Frenet Serret frame changes by the matrix of a rotation Q Q M displaystyle Q rightarrow QM nbsp A fortiori the matrix dQ ds QT is unaffected by a rotation d Q M d s Q M d Q d s M M Q d Q d s Q displaystyle frac mathrm d QM mathrm d s QM top frac mathrm d Q mathrm d s MM top Q top frac mathrm d Q mathrm d s Q top nbsp since MMT I for the matrix of a rotation Hence the entries k and t of dQ ds QT are invariants of the curve under Euclidean motions if a Euclidean motion is applied to a curve then the resulting curve has the same curvature and torsion Moreover using the Frenet Serret frame one can also prove the converse any two curves having the same curvature and torsion functions must be congruent by a Euclidean motion Roughly speaking the Frenet Serret formulas express the Darboux derivative of the TNB frame If the Darboux derivatives of two frames are equal then a version of the fundamental theorem of calculus asserts that the curves are congruent In particular the curvature and torsion are a complete set of invariants for a curve in three dimensions Other expressions of the frame editThe formulas given above for T N and B depend on the curve being given in terms of the arclength parameter This is a natural assumption in Euclidean geometry because the arclength is a Euclidean invariant of the curve In the terminology of physics the arclength parametrization is a natural choice of gauge However it may be awkward to work with in practice A number of other equivalent expressions are available Suppose that the curve is given by r t where the parameter t need no longer be arclength Then the unit tangent vector T may be written as T t r t r t displaystyle mathbf T t frac mathbf r t mathbf r t nbsp The normal vector N takes the form N t T t T t r t r t r t r t r t r t displaystyle mathbf N t frac mathbf T t mathbf T t frac mathbf r t times left mathbf r t times mathbf r t right left mathbf r t right left mathbf r t times mathbf r t right nbsp The binormal B is then B t T t N t r t r t r t r t displaystyle mathbf B t mathbf T t times mathbf N t frac mathbf r t times mathbf r t mathbf r t times mathbf r t nbsp An alternative way to arrive at the same expressions is to take the first three derivatives of the curve r t r t r t and to apply the Gram Schmidt process The resulting ordered orthonormal basis is precisely the TNB frame This procedure also generalizes to produce Frenet frames in higher dimensions In terms of the parameter t the Frenet Serret formulas pick up an additional factor of r t because of the chain rule d d t T N B r t 0 k 0 k 0 t 0 t 0 T N B displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d t begin bmatrix mathbf T mathbf N mathbf B end bmatrix mathbf r t begin bmatrix 0 amp kappa amp 0 kappa amp 0 amp tau 0 amp tau amp 0 end bmatrix begin bmatrix mathbf T mathbf N mathbf B end bmatrix nbsp Explicit expressions for the curvature and torsion may be computed For example k r t r t r t 3 displaystyle kappa frac mathbf r t times mathbf r t mathbf r t 3 nbsp The torsion may be expressed using a scalar triple product as follows t r t r t r t r t r t 2 displaystyle tau frac mathbf r t mathbf r t mathbf r t mathbf r t times mathbf r t 2 nbsp Special cases editIf the curvature is always zero then the curve will be a straight line Here the vectors N B and the torsion are not well defined If the torsion is always zero then the curve will lie in a plane A curve may have nonzero curvature and zero torsion For example the circle of radius R given by r t R cos t R sin t 0 in the z 0 plane has zero torsion and curvature equal to 1 R The converse however is false That is a regular curve with nonzero torsion must have nonzero curvature This is just the contrapositive of the fact that zero curvature implies zero torsion A helix has constant curvature and constant torsion Plane curves edit Further information Plane curve Given a curve contained on the x y plane its tangent vector T is also contained on that plane Its binormal vector B can be naturally postulated to coincide with the normal to the plane along the z axis Finally the curve normal can be found completing the right handed system N B T 11 This form is well defined even when the curvature is zero for example the normal to a straight line in a plane will be perpendicular to the tangent all co planar See also edit nbsp Mathematics portalAffine geometry of curves Differentiable curve Darboux frame Kinematics Moving frame Tangential and normal components Radial transverse normalNotes edit Kuhnel 2002 1 9 Only the first n 1 actually need to be linearly independent as the final remaining frame vector en can be chosen as the unit vector orthogonal to the span of the others such that the resulting frame is positively oriented This proof is likely due to Elie Cartan See Griffiths 1974 where he gives the same proof but using the Maurer Cartan form Our explicit description of the Maurer Cartan form using matrices is standard See for instance Spivak Volume II p 37 A generalization of this proof to n dimensions is not difficult but was omitted for the sake of exposition Again see Griffiths 1974 for details Crenshaw 1993 Iyer and Vishveshwara 1993 Rucker Rudy 1999 Watching Flies Fly Kappatau Space Curves San Jose State University Archived from the original on 15 October 2004 Kuhnel 2002 p 19 Goriely et al 2006 Hanson For terminology see Sternberg 1964 Lectures on Differential Geometry Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall p 252 254 ISBN 9780135271506 Weisstein Eric W Normal Vector MathWorld Wolfram References editCrenshaw H C Edelstein Keshet L 1993 Orientation by Helical Motion II Changing the direction of the axis of motion Bulletin of Mathematical Biology 55 1 213 230 doi 10 1016 s0092 8240 05 80070 9 S2CID 50734771 Etgen Garret Hille Einar Salas Saturnino 1995 Salas and Hille s Calculus One and Several Variables 7th ed John Wiley amp Sons p 896 Frenet F 1847 Sur les courbes a double courbure PDF These Toulouse Abstract in Journal de Mathematiques Pures et Appliquees 17 1852 Goriely A Robertson Tessi M Tabor M Vandiver R 2006 Elastic growth models BIOMAT 2006 PDF Springer Verlag archived from the original PDF on 2006 12 29 Griffiths Phillip 1974 On Cartan s method of Lie groups and moving frames as applied to uniqueness and existence questions in differential geometry Duke Mathematical Journal 41 4 775 814 doi 10 1215 S0012 7094 74 04180 5 S2CID 12966544 Guggenheimer Heinrich 1977 Differential Geometry Dover ISBN 0 486 63433 7 Hanson A J 2007 Quaternion Frenet Frames Making Optimal Tubes and Ribbons from Curves PDF Indiana University Technical Report Iyer B R Vishveshwara C V 1993 Frenet Serret description of gyroscopic precession Phys Rev D 48 12 5706 5720 arXiv gr qc 9310019 Bibcode 1993PhRvD 48 5706I doi 10 1103 physrevd 48 5706 PMID 10016237 S2CID 119458843 Jordan Camille 1874 Sur la theorie des courbes dans l espace a n dimensions C R Acad Sci Paris 79 795 797 Kuhnel Wolfgang 2002 Differential geometry Student Mathematical Library vol 16 Providence R I American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 2656 0 MR 1882174 Serret J A 1851 Sur quelques formules relatives a la theorie des courbes a double courbure PDF Journal de Mathematiques Pures et Appliquees 16 Spivak Michael 1999 A Comprehensive Introduction to Differential Geometry Volume Two Publish or Perish Inc Sternberg Shlomo 1964 Lectures on Differential Geometry Prentice Hall Struik Dirk J 1961 Lectures on Classical Differential Geometry Reading Mass Addison Wesley External links editCreate your own animated illustrations of moving Frenet Serret frames curvature and torsion functions Maple Worksheet Rudy Rucker s KappaTau Paper Very nice visual representation for the trihedron Retrieved from https en 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