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  2. Torsion of a curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_of_a_curve

    Geometric relevance: The torsion τ(s) measures the turnaround of the binormal vector. The larger the torsion is, the faster the binormal vector rotates around the axis given by the tangent vector (see graphical illustrations). In the animated figure the rotation of the binormal vector is clearly visible at the peaks of the torsion function.

  3. Frenet–Serret formulas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frenet–Serret_formulas

    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.

  4. Torsion tensor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_tensor

    Thus the torsion tensor is a tensor: a (bilinear) function of two input vectors v and w that produces an output vector (,). It is skew symmetric in the arguments v and w , a reflection of the fact that traversing the circuit in the opposite sense undoes the original displacement, in much the same way that twisting a screw in opposite directions ...

  5. Darboux vector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darboux_vector

    The Darboux vector provides a concise way of interpreting curvature κ and torsion τ geometrically: curvature is the measure of the rotation of the Frenet frame about the binormal unit vector, whereas torsion is the measure of the rotation of the Frenet frame about the tangent unit vector. [2]

  6. Curvature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curvature

    The normal curvature, k n, is the curvature of the curve projected onto the plane containing the curve's tangent T and the surface normal u; the geodesic curvature, k g, is the curvature of the curve projected onto the surface's tangent plane; and the geodesic torsion (or relative torsion), τ r, measures the rate of change of the surface ...

  7. Connection form - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connection_form

    To describe the torsion, note that the vector bundle E is the tangent bundle. This carries a canonical solder form (sometimes called the canonical one-form, especially in the context of classical mechanics) that is the section θ of Hom(TM, TM) = T ∗ M ⊗ TM corresponding to the identity endomorphism of the tangent spaces.

  8. 10 Overrated Foods People Are Pretending to Enjoy - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/10-overrated-foods-people...

    3. Foie Gras. Foie gras is probably the ultimate starter-pack item for acting like a rich person, and the one food item that chefs love to cook to appeal to said rich people.Redditors on the other ...

  9. Fundamental theorem of Riemannian geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_theorem_of...

    An extension of the fundamental theorem states that given a pseudo-Riemannian manifold there is a unique connection preserving the metric tensor, with any given vector-valued 2-form as its torsion. The difference between an arbitrary connection (with torsion) and the corresponding Levi-Civita connection is the contorsion tensor.