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  2. Curvature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curvature

    The mean curvature is an extrinsic measure of curvature equal to half the sum of the principal curvatures, ⁠ k 1 + k 2 / 2 ⁠. It has a dimension of length −1. Mean curvature is closely related to the first variation of surface area. In particular, a minimal surface such as a soap film has mean curvature zero and a soap bubble has

  3. Gaussian curvature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_curvature

    Gaussian curvature is an intrinsic measure of curvature, meaning that it could in principle be measured by a 2-dimensional being living entirely within the surface, because it depends only on distances that are measured “within” or along the surface, not on the way it is isometrically embedded in Euclidean space.

  4. Mean curvature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mean_curvature

    Furthermore, a surface which evolves under the mean curvature of the surface , is said to obey a heat-type equation called the mean curvature flow equation. The sphere is the only embedded surface of constant positive mean curvature without boundary or singularities. However, the result is not true when the condition "embedded surface" is ...

  5. Differential geometry of surfaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differential_geometry_of...

    The mean curvature is an extrinsic invariant. In intrinsic geometry, a cylinder is developable, meaning that every piece of it is intrinsically indistinguishable from a piece of a plane since its Gauss curvature vanishes identically. Its mean curvature is not zero, though; hence extrinsically it is different from a plane.

  6. Radius of curvature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radius_of_curvature

    Radius of curvature and center of curvature. In differential geometry, the radius of curvature, R, is the reciprocal of the curvature. For a curve, it equals the radius of the circular arc which best approximates the curve at that point. For surfaces, the radius of curvature is the radius of a circle that best fits a normal section or ...

  7. Torsion of a curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_of_a_curve

    A plane curve with non-vanishing curvature has zero torsion at all points. Conversely, if the torsion of a regular curve with non-vanishing curvature is identically zero, then this curve belongs to a fixed plane. The curvature and the torsion of a helix are constant. Conversely, any space curve whose curvature and torsion are both constant and ...

  8. Ricci curvature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricci_curvature

    Broadly, one could analogize the role of the Ricci curvature in Riemannian geometry to that of the Laplacian in the analysis of functions; in this analogy, the Riemann curvature tensor, of which the Ricci curvature is a natural by-product, would correspond to the full matrix of second derivatives of a function.

  9. Constant curvature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constant_curvature

    Here, curvature refers to the sectional curvature of a space (more precisely a manifold) and is a single number determining its local geometry. [1] The sectional curvature is said to be constant if it has the same value at every point and for every two-dimensional tangent plane at that point.