Geodesic curvature


In Riemannian geometry, the geodesic curvature of a curve measures how far the curve is from being a geodesic. For example, for 1D curves on a 2D surface embedded in 3D space, it is the curvature of the curve projected onto the surface's tangent plane. More generally, in a given manifold, the geodesic curvature is just the usual curvature of . However, when the curve is restricted to lie on a submanifold of , geodesic curvature refers to the curvature of in and it is different in general from the curvature of in the ambient manifold . The curvature of depends on two factors: the curvature of the submanifold in the direction of , which depends only on the direction of the curve, and the curvature of seen in , which is a second order quantity. The relation between these is. In particular geodesics on have zero geodesic curvature, so that, which explains why they appear to be curved in ambient space whenever the submanifold is.

Definition

Consider a curve in a manifold, parametrized by arclength, with unit tangent vector. Its curvature is the norm of the covariant derivative of :. If lies on, the geodesic curvature is the norm of the projection of the covariant derivative on the tangent space to the submanifold. Conversely the normal curvature is the norm of the projection of on the normal bundle to the submanifold at the point considered.
If the ambient manifold is the euclidean space, then the covariant derivative is just the usual derivative.

Example

Let be the unit sphere in three-dimensional Euclidean space. The normal curvature of is identically 1, independently of the direction considered. Great circles have curvature, so they have zero geodesic curvature, and are therefore geodesics. Smaller circles of radius will have curvature and geodesic curvature.

Some results involving geodesic curvature