Involute

Involute

In the differential geometry of curves, an involute of a smooth curve is another curve, obtained by attaching an imaginary taut string to the given curve and tracing its free end as it is wound onto that given curve; or in reverse, unwound. It is a roulette wherein the rolling curve is a straight line containing the generating point.

The evolute of an involute is the original curve less portions of zero or undefined curvature. Compare and

Plotting-function

Analytically: if function r:mathbb R omathbb R^n is a natural parametrization of the curve ("i.e." |r^prime(s)|=1 for all "s"), then :tmapsto r(t)-tr^prime(t)parametrises the involute.

Equations of an involute of a parametrically defined curve are:

X [x,y] =x-frac{x'int_a^t sqrt { x'^2 + y'^2 }, dt}{sqrt { x'^2 + y'^2
Y [x,y] =y-frac{y'int_a^t sqrt { x'^2 + y'^2 }, dt}{sqrt { x'^2 + y'^2

Examples

Involute of a circle

*In polar coordinates , r, heta the involute of a circle has the parametric equation:

:, r=asecalpha

:, heta = analpha - alpha
where , a is the radius of the circle and , alpha is a parameter

Leonhard Euler proposed to use the involute of the circle for the shape of the teeth of toothwheel gear, a design which is the prevailing one in current use.

Involute of a catenary

The involute of a catenary through its vertex is a tractrix. In cartesian coordinates the curve follows:

x=t- anh(t),
y= m sech(t),
Where: "t" is the angle and sech is the hyperbolic secant (1/cosh(x))"Derivative"

With r(s)=(sinh^{-1}(s),cosh(sinh^{-1}(s))),

we have r^prime(s)=(1,s)/sqrt{1+s^2},

and r(t)-tr^prime(t)=(sinh^{-1}(t)-t/sqrt{1+t^2},1/sqrt{1+t^2}).

Substitute t=sqrt{1-y^2}/y

to get ({ m sech}^{-1}(y)-sqrt{1-y^2},y).

Involute of a cycloid

"One" involute of a cycloid is a congruent cycloid. In cartesian coordinates the curve follows:

:x=a(t+sin(t)),

:y=a(3+cos(t)),

Where "t" is the angle and "a" the radius

Application

The involute of a circle has some properties that makes it extremely important to the gear industry: If two intermeshed gears have teeth with the profile-shape of involutes (rather than, for example, a "classic" triangular shape), their relative rates of rotation are constant while the teeth are engaged. Also, the gears always make contact along a single steady line of force. With teeth of other shapes, the relative speeds and forces rise and fall as successive teeth engage, resulting in vibration, noise, and excessive wear. For this reason, nearly all modern gear teeth bear the involute shape.

See Involute gear

External links

* [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Involute.html Mathworld]


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • involuté — involuté, ée [ ɛ̃vɔlyte ] adj. • 1798; lat. involutus, de involvere « enrouler » ♦ Bot. Roulé de dehors en dedans. Chapeau involuté d un champignon. ● involuté, involutée adjectif (latin involutus) Se dit d un organe végétal qui est roulé en… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • involute — [in′və lo͞ot΄] adj. [L involutus, pp. of involvere, INVOLVE] 1. intricate; involved 2. rolled up or curled in a spiral; having whorls wound closely around the axis [involute shells] 3. Bot. rolled inward at the edges [involute leaves] n. Math …   English World dictionary

  • Involute — In vo*lute, Involuted In vo*lu ted, a. [L. involutus, p. p. of involvere. See {Involve}.] 1. (Bot.) Rolled inward from the edges; said of leaves in vernation, or of the petals of flowers in [ae]stivation. Gray. [1913 Webster] 2. (Zo[ o]l.) (a)… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Involute — In vo*lute, n. (Geom.) A curve traced by the end of a string wound upon another curve, or unwound from it; called also {evolvent}. See {Evolute}. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • involute — index elaborate, inextricable, labyrinthine, sinuous, snarl Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • involuté — involuté, ée (in vo lu té, tée) adj. Terme de botanique. Qui est roulé en dedans. Pétales involutés. ÉTYMOLOGIE    Lat. involutus, de involvere, envelopper (voy. involucre) …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • involute — (adj.) early 15c., from L. involutus rolled up, intricate, obscure, pp. of involvere (see INVOLVE (Cf. involve)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • involute — I. adjective Etymology: Latin involutus concealed, from past participle of involvere Date: 1661 1. a. curled spirally b. (1) curled or curved inward (2) having the edges rolled over the upper surface toward the midrib < an involute leaf > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • involute — in•vo•lute adj., n. [[t]ˈɪn vəˌlut[/t]] v. [[t]ˌɪn vəˈlut[/t]] adj. n. v. lut•ed, lut•ing 1) intricate; complex 2) mac curled or curved inward or spirally: a gear with involute teeth[/ex] 3) bio rolled inward from the edge, as a leaf 4) zool. (of …   From formal English to slang

  • Involute — evolventė statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. evolvent; involute vok. Evolvente, f; Involute, f rus. эвольвента, f pranc. développante, f …   Fizikos terminų žodynas

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