Differential Geometry Notes
Differential Geometry Notes
Differential Geometry
Fall 2007, Georgia Tech
Lecture Notes 5
where
1
r(t) :=
κ(t)
is called the radius of curvature of α. If we had a way to define the osculating
circle independently of curvature, then we could define curvature simply as
the reciprocal of the radius of the osculating circle, and thus obtain a more
geometric definition for curvature.
|f 00 (t)|
κ(t) = p .
( 1 + f 0 (t)2 )3
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Last revised: October 2, 2007
1
Thus
κ(0) = |f 00 (0)|.
Next note that the center of the circle which is tangent to α at (0, 0) must
lie on the y-axis at some point (0, r), and for this circle to also pass through
the point (s, f (s)) we must have:
r2 = s2 + (r − f (s))2 .
Solving the above equation for r and taking the limit as s → 0, via the
L’Hopital’s rule, we have
2|f (s)|
lim = |f 00 (0)| = κ(0),
s→0 f 2 (s) + s2
Note 2. The above limit can be used to define a notion of curvature for
curves that are not twice differentiable. In this case, we may define the
upper curvature and lower curvature respectively as the upper and lower
limit of
2|f (s)|
.
f 2 (s) + s2
as s → 0. We may even distinguish between right handed and left handed
upper or lower curvature, by taking the right handed or left handed limits
respectively.
2
To prove the above result we need the following Lemma. Note that if
α : I → R2 is a curve with nonvanishing curvature, then the centers of the
osculating circles of α for the curve
To see this end first note that, since β contains no line segments (see the
previous exercise)
Z t1
kβ(t0 ) − β(t1 )k < kβ 0 (t)kdt.
t0
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Exercise 6. Show that a curve with monotone curvature cannot have any
self intersections.
Exercise 7. Show that a curve with monotone curvature cannot have any
bitangent lines.
The last two exercises show that a curve with monotone curvature looks
essentially as depicted in the following figure, i.e., it spirals around itself.
4
Exercise 10. Show that the total curvature of any convex planar curve is
2π. (Hint: We only need to check that the exterior angles of polygonal
approximations of a convex curve do not change sign. Recall that, as we
showed in a previous section, the sum of these angles is the total signed
curvature. So it follows that the signed curvature of any segment of α is
either zero or has the same sign as any other segment. This in turn implies
that the signed curvature of α does not change sign. So the total signed
curvature of α is equal to its total curvature up to a sign. Since by definition
the curve is simple, however, the total signed curvature is ±2π by Hopf’s
theorem.)
Theorem 11. For any closed planar curve α : I → R2 ,
Z
κ(t)dt ≥ 2π,
I
Since T (t) is not constant (why?), it follows that the function t 7→ hT (t), ui
must change sign. So the image of T must lie on both sides of the line through
the origin and orthogonal to u. Since u was chosen arbitrarily, it follows that
the image of T does not lie in any semicircle, as desired.
Next we show that the total curvature is 2π if and only if α is convex.
The “if” part has been established already in exercise 10. To prove the “only
if” part, suppose that α is not convex, then there exists a tangent line `0 of
α, say at α(t0 ), with respect to which the image of α lies on both sides. Then
α must have two more tangent lines parallel to `0 .
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Exercise 13. Verify the last sentence (Hint: Let u be a unit vector or-
thogonal to ` and note that the function t 7→ hα(t) − α(t0 ), ui must have a
minimum and a maximum differerent from 0. Thus the derivative at these
two points vanishes.)
Now that we have established that α has three distinct parallel lines, it
follows that it must have at least two parallel tangents. This observation is
worth recording:
So if T is not onto then we are done (recall that we are trying to show
that if α is not convex, then its total curvature is bigger than 2π). We
may assume, therefore, that T is onto. This together with the above lemma
yields that the total curvature is bigger than 2π. To see this note that let
t1 , t2 ∈ I be the two points such that T (t1 ) and T (t2 ) are parallel and the
corresponding tangent lines are distict. Then T restricted to [t1 , t2 ] is a closed
nonconstant. So either T ([t1 , t2 ]) (i) covers some open segment of the circle
twice or (ii) covers the entire circle. Since we have established that T is onto,
the first possibility implies that the legth of T is bigger than 2π. Further,
since, T restricted to I − (t1 , t2 ) is not constant, the second possibility (ii)
would imply the again the first case (i). Hence we conclude that if α is not
convex, then its total curvature is bigger than 2π, which completes the proof
of Theorem 11.
Proof. Since α is simple, its total signed curature is ±2π by Hopf’s theorem.
After switching the orientation of α, if necessary, we may assume that the
total signed curvature is 2π. Suppose, towards a contradiction, that the
signed curvature does change sign. The integral of the signed curvature over
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the regions where its is positive must be bigger than 2π, which in turn implies
that the total curvature is bigger than 2π, which contradicts the previous
theorem. So if α is convex, then κ does not change sign.
Next suppose that κ does not change sign. Then the total signed curva-
ture is equal to the total curvature (up to a sign), which, since the curve is
simple, implies, via the Hopf’s theorem, that the total curvature is 2π. So
by the previous theorem the curve is convex.