This section discusses the resolution of into components along the moving basis vectors T and N, a result captured in the decomposition equation
Moreover, these are the only two components in the vector , so that this vector always remains in the osculating plane, the plane determined by the vectors T and N.
In the special case where the parameter is the time , the derivative is V, the velocity vector; is a, the acceleration vector, and is the speed, the magnitude of the velocity vector. In this event, the decomposition of the acceleration vector into components along the tangent and normal vectors is written
where the overdot denotes differentiation with respect to , so and . Thus, the formula for the acceleration vector reads aloud with an alliterative "vee-dot tee", which helps this author remember which component goes with the vector T.
The term , called the rate of change of the speed, is not the "scalar acceleration ." The reader is cautioned
there is no scalar associated with acceleration
The length of the velocity vector V is the scalar speed , but the length of the acceleration vector a is not a scalar of any dynamic significance. It is an egregious error to believe is , the length of the acceleration vector. In fact, using the overdot to denote differentiation with respect to , the acceleration vector is
and its length is = , whereas the speed is ; so the rate of change of the speed is given by the derivative
It should be clear that and are completely unrelated.
A derivation of the decomposition formula is given in Example 2.8.9.