Inflection points in differential geometry are the points of the curve where the
curvature changes its sign. For example, the graph of the
differentiable function has an inflection point at if and only if its
first derivative has an
isolated extremum at . (This is not the same as saying that has an extremum). That is, in some neighborhood, is the one and only point at which has a (local) minimum or maximum. If all
extrema of are
isolated, then an inflection point is a point on the graph of at which the
tangent crosses the curve. A
falling point of inflection is an inflection point where the derivative is negative on both sides of the point; in other words, it is an inflection point near which the function is decreasing. A
rising point of inflection is a point where the derivative is positive on both sides of the point; in other words, it is an inflection point near which the function is increasing. For a smooth curve given by
parametric equations, a point is an inflection point if its
signed curvature changes from plus to minus or from minus to plus, i.e., changes
sign. For a smooth curve which is a graph of a twice differentiable function, an inflection point is a point on the graph at which the
second derivative has an isolated zero and changes sign. In
algebraic geometry, a non singular point of an
algebraic curve is an
inflection point if and only if the
intersection number of the tangent line and the curve (at the point of tangency) is greater than 2. The main motivation of this different definition, is that otherwise the set of the inflection points of a curve would not be an
algebraic set. In fact, the set of the inflection points of a plane algebraic curve are exactly its
non-singular points that are zeros of the
Hessian determinant of its
projective completion. is , and its sign is thus the opposite of the sign of . Tangent is blue where the curve is
convex (above its own
tangent), green where concave (below its tangent), and red at inflection points: 0, /2 and ==Conditions==