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Twist (mathematics)

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In mathematics (differential geometry) twist is the rate of rotation of a smooth ribbon around the space curve X = X ( s ) , where s is the arc length of X and U = U ( s ) a unit vector perpendicular at each point to X . Since the ribbon ( X , U ) has edges X and X = X + ε U the twist (or total twist number) T w measures the average winding of the curve X around and along the curve X . According to Love (1944) twist is defined by

T w = 1 2 π ( d U d s × U ) d X d s d s ,

where d X / d s is the unit tangent vector to X . The total twist number T w can be decomposed (Moffatt & Ricca 1992) into normalized total torsion T [ 0 , 1 ) and intrinsic twist N Z as

T w = 1 2 π τ d s + [ Θ ] X 2 π = T + N ,

where τ = τ ( s ) is the torsion of the space curve X , and [ Θ ] X denotes the total rotation angle of U along X . Neither N nor T w are independent of the ribbon field U . Instead, only the normalized torsion T is an invariant of the curve X (Banchoff & White 1975).

When the ribbon is deformed so as to pass through an inflectional state (i.e. X has a point of inflection) torsion becomes singular, but its singularity is integrable (Moffatt & Ricca 1992) and T w remains continuous. This behavior has many important consequences for energy considerations in many fields of science.

Together with the writhe W r of X , twist is a geometric quantity that plays an important role in the application of the Călugăreanu–White–Fuller formula L k = W r + T w in topological fluid dynamics (for its close relation to kinetic and magnetic helicity of a vector field), physical knot theory, and structural complexity analysis.

References

Twist (mathematics) Wikipedia


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