Computer Aided Engineering Design

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76 COMPUTER AIDED ENGINEERING DESIGN


AsQ approaches P, i.e. in the limit Δu→0, the length Δs becomes the differential arc length dsof the
curve, that is


ds

d
du
= = | | du d u = du

r
rrr ̇ ̇ ̇⋅ (3.20)

For a reference value u 0 , the arc length s(u) at parameter value umay be computed from Eq. (3.20) as


su du x y z du
u

u

u

u
( ) = = + +
00

222
∫∫

rr ̇ ̇⋅ ̇ ̇ ̇ (3.21)

The parametric velocity v may be defined as


v

r
= = ( )

d
du
r ̇u (3.22)

A unit tangent Tat point Pis along the direction of the parametric velocity, that is, T = v/| v |, where
|v | = |dr/du| = ds/du from Eq. (3.20). Thus


T

̇
= ̇

()
| ( ) |
=

()
= ( )

r
r

r
r

u
u

ds
ds
′ s (3.23)

Therefore, ̇


rr
rrT = = = ( ) =

d
du

d
ds

ds
du
′ svv

wherevis the parametric speed equal to | v |. The unit tangent Tis expressed above as a function
of the arc length. On a parametric curve r=r(u),P is said to be a regular point if | | 0. ̇r ≠ If P
is not regular, it is termed singular. The curve can be represented either in the form r≡r(u), or
r≡ r(s); the first is dependent on the parameter u and thus on the co-ordinate axes chosen while
the second is independent of the co-ordinate axes and is a function of the natural parameter or the
arc length s.


Figure 3.7 Cylindrical helix

O



z

bu
r(u)
y x

a sin u a cos u
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