Tangent vector
- For a more general, but much more technical, treatment of tangent vectors, see tangent space.
 
In mathematics, a tangent vector is a vector that is tangent to a curve or surface at a given point. Tangent vectors are described in the differential geometry of curves in the context of curves in Rn. More generally, tangent vectors are elements of a tangent space of a differentiable manifold. Tangent vectors can also be described in terms of germs. In other words, a tangent vector at the point 
 is a linear derivation of the algebra defined by the set of germs at 
.
Motivation
Before proceeding to a general definition of the tangent vector, we discuss its use in calculus and its tensor properties.
Calculus
Let 
 be a parametric smooth curve. The tangent vector is given by 
, where we have used the a prime instead of the usual dot to indicate differentiation with respect to parameter t.[1] the unit tangent vector is given by
Example
Given the curve
in 
, the unit tangent vector at time 
 is given by
Contravariance
If 
 is given parametrically in the n-dimensional coordinate system xi (here we have used superscripts as an index instead of the usual subscript) by 
 or
then the tangent vector field 
 is given by
Under a change of coordinates
the tangent vector 
 in the ui-coordinate system is given by
where we have used the Einstein summation convention. Therefore, a tangent vector of a smooth curve will transform as a contravariant tensor of order one under a change of coordinates.[2]
Definition
Let 
 be a differentiable function and let 
 be a vector in 
. We define the directional derivative in the 
 direction at a point 
 by
The tangent vector at the point 
 may then be defined[3] as
Properties
Let 
 be differentiable functions, let 
 be tangent vectors in 
 at 
, and let 
. Then
Tangent Vector on Manifolds
Let 
 be a differentiable manifold and let 
 be the algebra of real-valued differentiable functions 
. Then the tangent vector to 
 at a point 
 in the manifold is given by the derivation 
 which shall be linear — i.e., for any 
 and 
 we have
Note that the derivation will by definition have the Leibniz property
References
Bibliography
- Gray, Alfred (1993), Modern Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces, Boca Raton: CRC Press.
 - Stewart, James (2001), Calculus: Concepts and Contexts, Australia: Thomson/Brooks/Cole.
 - Kay, David (1988), Schaums Outline of Theory and Problems of Tensor Calculus, New York: McGraw-Hill.
 













