Chapter Two, the local theory of the curve
2.1 Concept of the curve
A discussion of non-regular curves:
, which is an irregular point (a sharp point), and it is an irregular curve.
Intuitively, discontinuities, outliers, nodes (intersections), cusp points are non-regular points.
It is recorded that when the same curve is represented by different parametric equations, the same curve may appear as a regular curve under one parameter representation and a non-regular curve under another parameter representation.
To give a simple example:
The parametric equation of a circle can be expressed as:
It can also be expressed as:
It can be seen that the curve represented by the first parametric equation is a regular curve, and the curve represented by the second parametric equation is a non-regular curve.
2.2 Planar curve
2.3 E3 curve
The basic theorem of 2.4 curve theory
The local theory of the second chapter curve of differential geometry