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This is the conic which makes third order [[contact (mathematics)|contact]] with the curve at ''P'', and may be regarded as a third-order generalization of the [[osculating circle]] of Euclidean geometry.
This is the conic which makes third order [[contact (mathematics)|contact]] with the curve at ''P'', and may be regarded as a third-order generalization of the [[osculating circle]] of Euclidean geometry.


In some contexts, the '''affine curvature''' refers to a differential invariant &kappa; of the [[affine group|general affine group]], which may readily obtained from the special affine curvature ''k'' by &kappa; = ''k''<sup>&minus;3/2</sup>d''k''/d''s'', where ''s'' is the equi-affine arc length. Where the general affine group is not used, the special affine curvature ''k'' is sometimes (confusingly) also called the affine curvature {{harv|Shirokov|2001b}}.
In some contexts, the '''affine curvature''' refers to a differential invariant &kappa; of the [[affine group|general affine group]], which may readily obtained from the special affine curvature ''k'' by &kappa; = ''k''<sup>&minus;3/2</sup>d''k''/d''s'', where ''s'' is the special affine arc length. Where the general affine group is not used, the special affine curvature ''k'' is sometimes (confusingly) also called the affine curvature {{harv|Shirokov|2001b}}.


==Formal definition==
==Formal definition==

Revision as of 22:34, 1 September 2008

This article is about the curvature of affine plane curves, not to be confused with the curvature of an affine connection.

Affine curvature, also known as the equi-affine or special affine curvature, is a particular type of curvature that is defined on a plane curve that remains unchanged under a special affine transformation (an affine transformation that preserves area). The curves of constant equi-affine curvature k are precisely all non-singular plane conics. Those with k > 0 are ellipses, those with k = 0 are parabolas, and those with k < 0 are hyperbolas.

The curvature of a general curve at a point P defines a conic, called the hyperosculating conic, which is the limiting position of the (unique) conic through four points P1, P2, P3, P4 on the curve, as

This is the conic which makes third order contact with the curve at P, and may be regarded as a third-order generalization of the osculating circle of Euclidean geometry.

In some contexts, the affine curvature refers to a differential invariant κ of the general affine group, which may readily obtained from the special affine curvature k by κ = k−3/2dk/ds, where s is the special affine arc length. Where the general affine group is not used, the special affine curvature k is sometimes (confusingly) also called the affine curvature (Shirokov 2001b).

Formal definition

Special affine arclength

To define the special affine curvature, it is necessary first to define the special affine arclength (also called the equi-affine arclength). Consider an affine plane curve . Choose co-ordinates for the affine plane such that the area of the parallelogram spanned by two vectors and is given by the determinant

In particular, the determinant

is a well-defined invariant of the special affine group, and gives the signed area of the parallelogram spanned by the velocity and acceleration of the curve β. Consider a reparameterization of the curve β, say with a new parameter s related to t by means of a regular reparameterization s = s(t). This determinant undergoes then a transformation of the following sort, by the chain rule:

The reparameterization can be chosen so that

provided the velocity and acceleration, dβ/dt and d2β/dt2 are linearly independent. Existence and uniqueness of such a parameterization follows by integration:

This integral is called the special affine arclength, and a curve carrying this parameterization is said to be parameterized with respect to its special affine arclength.

Affine and special affine curvature

Suppose that β(s) is a curve parameterized with its special affine arclength. Then the special affine curvature (or equi-affine curvature) is given by

Here β′ denotes the derivative of β with respect to s.

More generally (Guggenheimer 1977, §7.3; Blaschke 1923, §5), for a plane curve with arbitrary parameterization

the special affine curvature is:

provided the first and second derivatives of the curve are linearly independent. In the special case of a graph y = y(x), these formulas reduce to

where the prime denotes differentiation with respect to x (Blaschke 1923, §5; Shirokov 2001a).

Affine curvature

Suppose as above that β(s) is a curve parameterized by special affine arclength. There are a pair of invariants of the curve that are invariant under the full general affine group (Shirokov 2001b) — the group of all affine motions of the plane, not just those that are area-preserving. The first of these is

sometimes called the affine arclength (although this risks confusion with the special affine arclength described above). The second is referred to as the affine curvature:

Conics

Suppose that β(s) is a curve parameterized by special affine arclength with constant affine curvature k. Let

Note that det Cβ, since β is assumed to carry the special affine arclength parameterization, and that

It follows from the form of Cβ that

By applying a suitable special affine transformation, we can arrange that Cβ(0) = I is the identity matrix. Since k is constant, it follows that Cβ is given by the matrix exponential

The three cases are now as follows.

k = 0

If the curvature vanishes identically, then upon passing to a limit,

so β'(s) = (1,s), and so integration gives

which is the special affine parameterization of the parabola y = x2/2.

k > 0

If the special affine curvature is positive, then it follows that

so that

which is the special affine parameterization of the ellipse kx2 + k2y2 = 1.

k < 0

If k is negative, then the trigonometric functions in Cβ give way to hyperbolic functions:

Thus

which is the special affine parameterization of the hyperbola

Characterization up to affine congruence

The special affine curvature of an immersed curve is the only (local) invariant of the curve in the following sense:

  • If two curves have the same special affine curvature at every point, then one curve is obtained from the other by means of a special affine transformation.

In fact, a slightly stronger statement holds:

  • Given any continuous function k : [a,b] → R, there exists a curve β whose first and second derivatives are linearly independent, such that the special affine curvature of β relative to the special affine parameterization is equal to the given function k. The curve β is uniquely determined up to a special affine transformation.

This is analogous to the fundamental theorem of curves in the classical Euclidean differential geometry of curves, in which the complete classification of plane curves up to Euclidean motion depends on a single function κ, the curvature of the curve. It follows essentially by applying the Picard-Lindelöf theorem to the system

where Cβ = [β′ β′′]. An alternative approach, rooted in the theory of moving frames, is to apply the existence of a primitive for the Darboux derivative.

Derivation of the curvature by affine invariance

The special affine curvature can be derived explicitly by techniques of invariant theory. For simplicity, suppose that an affine plane curve is given in the form of a graph y = y(x). The special affine group acts on the Cartesian plane via transformations of the form

with ad − bc = 1. The following vector fields span the Lie algebra of infinitesimal generators of the special affine group:

An affine transformation not only acts on points, but also on the tangent lines to graphs of the form y = y(x). That is, there is an action of the special affine group on triples of coordinates

The group action is generated by vector fields

defined on the space of three variables (x,y,y′). These vector fields can be determined by the following two requirements:

  • Under the projection onto the xy-plane, they must to project to the corresponding original generators of the action , respectively.
  • The vectors must preserve up to scale the contact structure of the jet space
Concretely, this means that the generators X(1) must satisfy
where L is the Lie derivative.

Similarly, the action of the group can be extended to the space of any number of derivatives

The prolonged vector fields generating the action of the special affine group must then inductively satisfy, for each generator X ∈ {T1,T2,X1,X2,H}:

  • The projection of X(k) onto the space of variables (x,y,y′,…,y(k−1)) is X(k−1).
  • X(k) preserves the contact ideal:
where

Carrying out the inductive construction up to order 4 gives

See also

References

  • Blaschke, Wilhelm (1923), Affine Differentialgeometrie, Vorlesungen über Differentialgeometrie und geometrische Grundlagen von Einsteins Relativitätstheorie, vol. II, Berlin: Springer-Verlag OHG
  • Guggenheimer, Heinrich (1977), Differential Geometry, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-63433-3
  • Shirokov, A.P. (2001a) [1994], "Affine curvature", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Shirokov, A.P. (2001b) [1994], "Affine differential geometry", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Spivak, Michael (1999), A Comprehensive introduction to differential geometry (Volume 2), Houston, TX: Publish or Perish, ISBN 978-0-914098-71-3