I’m attempting to explain curvature in layman’s terms to my class before explaining the formula. I like to do this first to give my students an idea of what we are finding.
Some people explain curvature as a “measure of how fast a curve is changing direction at a given point.” But this seems misleading to me. It seems to me that when someone say “how fast” most people interpret that as a change in direction per unit time. But time has nothing to do with it correct?
For example the curvature is the same for any particular curve regardless of the speed of its parametrization. So time has nothing to do with it. The way I’ve been explaining curvature in laymen’s terms is that it is a “measure of how ‘hard’ a curve is changing direction at a given point”.
Do you think this is sufficient for a laymen’s term explanation without leading the students astray with a time component. Perhaps you have another way to explain it? Or perhaps other people’s laymen definition is perfectly fine and I’m over analyzing.
Advice?