Formal definitionSurfaceMore formally, let S be a surface, and x be a point on the surface. Let where the first vector in the sum is the tangential component and the second one is the normal component. It follows immediately that these two vectors are perpendicular to each other. To calculate the tangential and normal components, consider a unit normal to the surface, that is, a unit vector and thus where " where " Note that these formulas do not depend on the particular unit normal SubmanifoldMore generally, given a submanifold N of a manifold M and a point The quotient space TpM / TpN is a generalized space of normal vectors. If M is a Riemannian manifold, the above sequence splits, and the tangent space of M at p decomposes as a direct sum of the component tangent to N and the component normal to N: Thus every tangent vector ComputationsSuppose N is given by non-degenerate equations. If N is given explicitly, via parametric equations (such as a parametric curve), then the derivative gives a spanning set for the tangent bundle (it's a basis if and only if the parametrization is an immersion). If N is given implicitly (as in the above description of a surface, or more generally as a hypersurface) as a level set or intersection of level surfaces for gi, then the gradients of gi span the normal space. In both cases, we can again compute using the dot product; the cross product is special to 3 dimensions though. Applications
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