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Consider a function whose domain is a subset of the set of all real numbers and whose range is a subset of all vectors in the plane. If we denote this function by <math>\mbox'''{v'''}</math>, then its value at each number <math>t</math> in the domain is the vector <math>\mbox'''{v'''}(t)</math>. Every such vector-valued function <math>\mbox'''{v'''}</math> of a real variable defines two real-valued '''coordinate functions''' | |||
<math>v_1</math> and <math>v_2</math> as follows: For every <math>t</math> in the domain of <math>\mbox'''{v'''}</math>, the numbers <math>v_1(t)</math> and <math>v_2(t)</math> are the first and second coordinates of the vector <math>\mbox'''{v'''}(t)</math>, respectively. Hence, if the initial point of <math>\mbox'''{v'''}(t)</math> is <math>P(t)</math>, then <math>v_1(t)</math> and <math>v_2(t)</math> are defined by the equation | <math>v_1</math> and <math>v_2</math> as follows: For every <math>t</math> in the domain of <math>\mbox'''{v'''}</math>, the numbers <math>v_1(t)</math> and <math>v_2(t)</math> are the first and second coordinates of the vector <math>\mbox'''{v'''}(t)</math>, respectively. Hence, if the initial point of <math>\mbox'''{v'''}(t)</math> is <math>P(t)</math>, then <math>v_1(t)</math> and <math>v_2(t)</math> are defined by the equation | ||
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provided <math>x'(t) \neq 0</math>. We conclude that the concept of tangency, as defined in terms of the derived vector to a parametrized curve, is consistent with the earlier notion, defined in terms of the derivative. | provided <math>x'(t) \neq 0</math>. We conclude that the concept of tangency, as defined in terms of the derived vector to a parametrized curve, is consistent with the earlier notion, defined in terms of the derivative. | ||
==General references== | ==General references== | ||
{{cite web |title=Crowell and Slesnick’s Calculus with Analytic Geometry|url=https://math.dartmouth.edu/~doyle/docs/calc/calc.pdf |last=Doyle |first=Peter G.|date=2008 |access-date=Oct 29, 2024}} | {{cite web |title=Crowell and Slesnick’s Calculus with Analytic Geometry|url=https://math.dartmouth.edu/~doyle/docs/calc/calc.pdf |last=Doyle |first=Peter G.|date=2008 |access-date=Oct 29, 2024}} |
Latest revision as of 00:41, 21 November 2024
Consider a function whose domain is a subset of the set of all real numbers and whose range is a subset of all vectors in the plane. If we denote this function by [math]\mbox'''{v'''}[/math], then its value at each number [math]t[/math] in the domain is the vector [math]\mbox'''{v'''}(t)[/math]. Every such vector-valued function [math]\mbox'''{v'''}[/math] of a real variable defines two real-valued coordinate functions [math]v_1[/math] and [math]v_2[/math] as follows: For every [math]t[/math] in the domain of [math]\mbox'''{v'''}[/math], the numbers [math]v_1(t)[/math] and [math]v_2(t)[/math] are the first and second coordinates of the vector [math]\mbox'''{v'''}(t)[/math], respectively. Hence, if the initial point of [math]\mbox'''{v'''}(t)[/math] is [math]P(t)[/math], then [math]v_1(t)[/math] and [math]v_2(t)[/math] are defined by the equation
Limits of vector-valued functions are defined in terms of limits of real-valued functions. Specifically, the limit of [math]\mbox'''{v'''}(t)[/math], as [math]t[/math] approaches [math]t_0[/math], will be denoted by [math]\lim_{t \rightarrow t_0} \mbox'''{v'''}(t)[/math] and is defined by
[For the definition of [math]\lim_{t \rightarrow t_0} P(t)[/math], see page 542.] There is the possibility that all the vectors [math]\mbox'''{v'''}(t)[/math] have the same initial point [math]P_0[/math], i.e., that they all lie in the vector space [math]\mathcal{V}_{P_0}[/math]. If this happens, (2) reduces to the simpler equation
Let [math]C[/math] be a curve in the plane defined by a parametrization [math]P: I \rightarrow R^2[/math]. If the coordinate functions of [math]P[/math] are denoted by [math]x[/math] and [math]y[/math], then [math]C[/math] is the set of all points
such that [math]t[/math] is in the interval [math]I[/math]. A typical example is shown in Figure 14. Consider a number [math]t_0[/math] in [math]I[/math]. If [math]t[/math] is in [math]I[/math] and distinct from [math]t_0[/math], then the vector [math](P(t_0), P(t))[/math] represents the change in the value of [math]P[/math] from the point [math]P(t_0)[/math] to the point [math]P(t)[/math]. Thus for a change in the value of the parameter from [math]t_0[/math] to [math]t[/math], the scalar product
is the ratio of the corresponding change in the value of [math]P[/math] to the difference [math]t - t_0[/math]. Hence the vector (3) represents an average rate of change in position with respect to a change in the parameter. In analogy with the definition of the derivative of a real-valued function, we define the derived vector of [math]P[/math] at [math]t_0[/math], denoted by [math]\mbox'''{d'''}P(t_0)[/math], by the equation
Since [math]P(t_0) = (x(t_0), y(t_0))[/math] and [math]P(t) = (x(t), y(t))[/math], the coordinate form of the vector [math](P(t_0), P(t))[/math] is given by
By the definition of the scalar product,
and so
Recall that the derivatives of the functions [math]x[/math] and [math]y[/math] at [math]t_0[/math] are by definition
provided these limits exist. It follows that
The parametrization defined by [math]P(t) = (x(t), y(t) )[/math] is differentiable at [math]t_0[/math] if and only if the derived vector [math]\mbox'''{d'''}P(t_0)[/math] exists. If it does exist, then
Example Consider the curve parametrized by
Compute the derived vectors of [math]P[/math] at [math]t_0 = - 1[/math], at [math]t_0 = 0[/math], and at [math]t_0 = 1[/math]. Draw the curve and the three derived vectors in the [math]xy[/math]-plane. As a result of (4.1), we have
Hence
The terminal points of the three derived vectors are, respectively,
The parametrized curve is a parabola, as can be seen by setting
Solving the second equation for [math]t[/math], we get [math]t = \frac{y -1}{2}[/math], and substituting this value in the first, we obtain [math]x = \frac{(y - 1)^2}{4} - 1[/math], or, equivalently,
The latter is an equation of a parabola with vertex (-1, 1). If [math]x = 0[/math], then [math]4 = (y - 1)^2[/math], or, equivalently, [math]\pm 2 = y -1[/math], which implies that [math]y = -1[/math] or 3. The parametrized curve together with the three vectors is shown in Figure 15. Note that each of these vectors is tangent to the parabola.
If a parametrization [math]P: I \rightarrow R^2[/math] is differentiable at [math]t_0[/math], then we define a tangent vector to the resulting parametrized curve at [math]t_0[/math] to be any scalar multiple of the derived vector [math]\mbox'''{d'''}P(t_0)[/math]. In particular, the derived vector itself is a tangent vector. The set of all tangent vectors at [math]t_0[/math] is a subset of [math]\mathcal{V}_{P(t_0)}[/math], since every scalar multiple of [math]\mbox'''{d'''}P(t_0)[/math] has initial point [math]P(t_0)[/math]. Moreover,
The set of all tangent vectors to the parametrized curve [math]P(t)[/math] at [math]t_0[/math] is a vector space.
This result has nothing to do with any special properties of the derived vector, since the set of all scalar multiples of any vector [math]\mbox'''{u'''}[/math] is a vector space. This result is proved, if [math]\mbox'''{u'''}[/math] is nonzero, in Example 3 of Section 3. If [math]\mbox'''{u'''}[/math] is a zero vector, the result is even simpler: The set of all scalar multiples of a zero vector [math]\mbox'''{0'''}[/math] is the set having [math]\mbox'''{0'''}[/math] as its only member, and the six conditions for a vector space are trivially satisfied. This completes the argument.
Consider a parametrization defined by [math]P(t)= (x(f), y(t))[/math], which is differentiable at [math]t_0[/math] and for which the derived vector [math]\mbox'''{d'''}P(t_0)[/math] is nonzero. If we set [math]x'(t_0) = d_1[/math] and [math]y'(t_0) = d_2[/math], then
where not both coordinates [math]d_1[/math] and [math]d_2[/math] are zero. The set of all tangent vectors at to is the set of all scalar multiples
where [math]s[/math] is any real number. If [math]P(t_0) = (a, b)[/math], then the terminal point of [math]s\mbox'''{d'''}P(t_0)[/math] is equal to
Hence the set of all terminal points of tangent vectors at [math]t_0[/math] is the set of all points [math](x, y)[/math] such that
where [math]s[/math] is any real number and [math]d_1[/math] and [math]d_2[/math] are not both zero. It is easy to verify that this set is a straight line (see Problem 4). We conclude that if the derived vector $\mbox{d}P(t_0)$ exists and is nonzero, then the set of all terminal points of the tangent vectors at $to$ to the curve parametrized by $P$ is a straight line. It is called the tangent line to the parametrized curve at [math]t_0[/math].
Example Consider the ellipse defined parametrically by
where
The parametrization [math]P[/math] can also be written in terms of the equations
If [math]s[/math] is an arbitrary real number, then the scalar product [math]s\mbox'''{d'''}P(t_0)[/math] in this example is the vector
It is important to know that the ideas introduced in this section are consistent with related concepts developed earlier. For example, consider a differentiable parametrization defined by
provided [math]x'(t) \neq 0[/math]. Hence [math]\frac{y'(t)}{x'(t)}[/math] is the slope of the line tangent to the graph of [math]f[/math] at the point
General references
Doyle, Peter G. (2008). "Crowell and Slesnick's Calculus with Analytic Geometry" (PDF). Retrieved Oct 29, 2024.