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Consider a $C^m$ curve $\gamma$ in $\mathbb{R}^3$ (with $m\geq 3$). Locally, at $0$ for convenience, one can express the curve as

$ \gamma(s) = \gamma(0)+sT+(s^2/2!)kN+(s^3/3!)(\dot{k}N-k^2T+k\tau B)+O(>3) $ ($k,\tau$ and the vectors $T,N,B$ are evaluated in $0$). Taking the first order terms we get a tangent line, taking the second order terms we get a parabola

$\gamma(0)+sT+\frac{s^2}{2!}kN $

that gives a local approximation of the curve near $s=0$. If we gather the terms in order to collect all the coefficients in $T$ and $N$ we have the following approximation for $\gamma$:

$\gamma(0)+s(1-\frac{s^2}{3!}k^2)\;T+\frac{s^2}{2}(k+\frac{s}{3}\dot{k})\;N. $

Now... the point is that the draft notes I am reading report that the above represents a parabola; this obviously does not convince me. How do you prove that the last expression defines a parabola in the $TN$ plane?

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    I think the report says that according to $\gamma(0)+sT+\frac{s^2}{2!}kN$, it represents a parabola in $TN$ plane.2011-11-23

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