In geometry, a spring is a surface in the shape of a coiled tube, generated by sweeping a circle about the path of a helix.[citation needed]

A Spring
A left-handed and a right-handed spring.

Definition edit

A spring wrapped around the z-axis can be defined parametrically by:

 
 
 

where

 
 
  is the distance from the center of the tube to the center of the helix,
  is the radius of the tube,
  is the speed of the movement along the z axis (in a right-handed Cartesian coordinate system, positive values create right-handed springs, whereas negative values create left-handed springs),
  is the number of rounds in a spring.

The implicit function in Cartesian coordinates for a spring wrapped around the z-axis, with   = 1 is

 

The interior volume of the spiral is given by

 

Other definitions edit

Note that the previous definition uses a vertical circular cross section. This is not entirely accurate as the tube becomes increasingly distorted as the Torsion[1] increases (ratio of the speed   and the incline of the tube).

An alternative would be to have a circular cross section in the plane perpendicular to the helix curve. This would be closer to the shape of a physical spring. The mathematics would be much more complicated.

The torus can be viewed as a special case of the spring obtained when the helix degenerates to a circle.

References edit

  1. ^ "Helix".

See also edit