
In
differential geometry, the notion of torsion is a manner of characterizing a twist or
screw of a
moving frame around a curve. The
torsion of a curve, as it appears in the
Frenet–Serret formulas
In differential geometry, the Frenet–Serret formulas describe the kinematic properties of a particle moving along a differentiable curve in three-dimensional Euclidean space \mathbb^, or the geometric properties of the curve itself irrespective ...
, for instance, quantifies the twist of a curve about its tangent vector as the curve evolves (or rather the rotation of the Frenet–Serret frame about the tangent vector). In the geometry of surfaces, the ''geodesic torsion'' describes how a surface twists about a curve on the surface. The companion notion of
curvature
In mathematics, curvature is any of several strongly related concepts in geometry. Intuitively, the curvature is the amount by which a curve deviates from being a straight line, or a surface deviates from being a plane.
For curves, the can ...
measures how moving frames "roll" along a curve "without twisting".
More generally, on a
differentiable manifold
In mathematics, a differentiable manifold (also differential manifold) is a type of manifold that is locally similar enough to a vector space to allow one to apply calculus. Any manifold can be described by a collection of charts (atlas). One ma ...
equipped with an
affine connection (that is, a
connection in the
tangent bundle
In differential geometry, the tangent bundle of a differentiable manifold M is a manifold TM which assembles all the tangent vectors in M . As a set, it is given by the disjoint unionThe disjoint union ensures that for any two points and ...
), torsion and curvature form the two fundamental invariants of the connection. In this context, torsion gives an intrinsic characterization of how
tangent spaces twist about a curve when they are
parallel transport
In geometry, parallel transport (or parallel translation) is a way of transporting geometrical data along smooth curves in a manifold. If the manifold is equipped with an affine connection (a covariant derivative or connection on the tangent b ...
ed; whereas curvature describes how the tangent spaces roll along the curve. Torsion may be described concretely as a
tensor
In mathematics, a tensor is an algebraic object that describes a multilinear relationship between sets of algebraic objects related to a vector space. Tensors may map between different objects such as vectors, scalars, and even other tens ...
, or as a
vector-valued 2-form on the manifold. If ∇ is an affine connection on a
differential manifold, then the torsion tensor is defined, in terms of vector fields ''X'' and ''Y'', by
: