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To gain a better understanding of the velocity and acceleration vectors, imagine you are driving along a curvy road. If you do not turn the steering wheel, you would continue in a straight line and run off the road. The speed at which you are traveling when you run off the road, coupled with the direction, gives a vector representing your velocity, as illustrated in the following figure.
However, the fact that you must turn the steering wheel to stay on the road indicates that your velocity is always changing (even if your speed is not) because your direction is constantly changing to keep you on the road. As you turn to the right, your acceleration vector also points to the right. As you turn to the left, your acceleration vector points to the left. This indicates that your velocity and acceleration vectors are constantly changing, regardless of whether your actual speed varies ( [link] ).
We can combine some of the concepts discussed in Arc Length and Curvature with the acceleration vector to gain a deeper understanding of how this vector relates to motion in the plane and in space. Recall that the unit tangent vector T and the unit normal vector N form an osculating plane at any point P on the curve defined by a vector-valued function The following theorem shows that the acceleration vector lies in the osculating plane and can be written as a linear combination of the unit tangent and the unit normal vectors.
The acceleration vector of an object moving along a curve traced out by a twice-differentiable function lies in the plane formed by the unit tangent vector and the principal unit normal vector to C. Furthermore,
Here, is the speed of the object and is the curvature of C traced out by
Because and we have Now we differentiate this equation:
Since we know so
A formula for curvature is so This gives
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The coefficients of and are referred to as the tangential component of acceleration and the normal component of acceleration , respectively. We write to denote the tangential component and to denote the normal component.
Let be a vector-valued function that denotes the position of an object as a function of time. Then is the acceleration vector. The tangential and normal components of acceleration and are given by the formulas
and
These components are related by the formula
Here is the unit tangent vector to the curve defined by and is the unit normal vector to the curve defined by
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