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Encyclopedia > Tensor notation

This is a glossary of tensor theory. For expositions of tensor theory from different points of view, see:

For some history of the abstract theory see also Multilinear algebra.

Contents

Classical notation

Rank of a tensor


A tensor written in component form is an indexed array. The rank of a tensor is the number of indices required.


Dyadic tensor


A dyadic tensor has rank two, and may be represented as a square matrix. The conventions aij, aij, and aij, do have different meanings, in that the first may represent a quadratic form, the second a linear transformation, and the distinction is important in contexts that require tensors that aren't orthogonal (see below). A dyad is a tensor such as aibj, product component-by-component of rank one tensors. In this case it represents a linear transformation, of rank one in the sense of linear algebra - a clashing terminology that can cause confusion.


Einstein notation This states that in a product of two indexed arrays, if an index letter in the first is repeated in the second, then the (default) interpretation is that the product is summed over all values of the index. For example if aij is a matrix, then under this convention aii is its trace. The Einstein convention is generally used in physics and engineering texts, to the extent that if summation is not applied it is normal to note that explicitly.


Kronecker delta


Levi-Civita symbol


Covariant tensor, Contravariant tensor


The classical interpretation is by components. For example in the differential form aidxj the components ai are a covariant vector. That means all indices are lower; contravariant means all indices are upper.


Mixed tensor


This refers to any tensor with lower and upper indices.


Orthogonal tensor


In the presence of a tensor δij, there is no need to maintain the distinction of upper and lower indices. That is the case given a distinguished set of orthogonal co-ordinates. Orthogonal tensors are also called cartesian tensors


Contraction of a tensor


Symmetric tensor


Antisymmetric tensor


Multiple cross products


Algebraic notation

This avoids the initial use of components, and is distinguished by the explicit use of the tensor product symbol.


Tensor product


If v and w are vectors in vector spaces V and W respectively, then

is a tensor in

.

That is, the operation is a binary operation, but it takes values in a fresh space (it is in a strong sense external). The operation is bilinear; but no other conditions are applied to it.


Pure tensor


A pure tensor of is one that is of the form .


It could be written dyadically aibj, or more accurately aibj eifj, where the ei are a basis for V and the fj a basis for W. Therefore, unless V and W have the same dimension, the array of components need not be square. Such pure tensors are not generic: if both V and W have dimension > 1, there will be tensors that are not pure, and there will be non-linear conditions for a tensor to satisfy, to be pure.


Tensor algebra


In the tensor algebra T(V) of a vector space V, the operation becomes a normal (internal) binary operation. This is at the cost of T(V) being of infinite dimension. The free algebra on a set 'X is for practical purposes the same as the tensor algebra on the vector space with X as basis.


Hodge star operator


Exterior power


The wedge product is the anti-symmetic form of the operation. The quotient space of T(V) on which it becomes an internal operation is the exterior algebra of V; it is a graded algebra, with the graded piece of weight k being called the k-th exterior power of V.


Symmetric power, symmetric algebra


This is the invariant way of constructing polynomial algebras.


Applications

Metric tensor


Strain tensor


Stress-energy tensor


Tensor field theory

Jacobian matrix


Tensor field


Tensor density


Lie derivative


Tensor derivative


Differential geometry


Abstract algebra

Tensor product of fields


This is an operation on fields, that does not always produce a field.


Tensor product of R-algebras


Representations of Clifford algebras


These may be worked out directly, or by a theory of Clifford modules.


Tor functors


These are the derived functors of the tensor product, and feature strongly in homological algebra. The name comes from the torsion subgroup in abelian group theory.


Symbolic method of invariant theory


Spinors

See: spin group, spin-c group, spinors , pin group, pinors , spinor field, Killing spinor, spin manifold.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Tensor field - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1198 words)
It is used in differential geometry and the theory of manifolds, in algebraic geometry, in general relativity, in the analysis of stress and strain in materials, and in numerous applications in the physical sciences and engineering.
The general idea of tensor field combines the requirement of richer geometry — for example an ellipsoid varying from point to point, in the case of a metric tensor — with the idea that we don't want our notion to depend on the particular method of mapping the surface.
A tensor density is the special case where L is the bundle of densities on a manifold, namely the determinant bundle of the cotangent bundle.
Tensor (intrinsic definition) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (958 words)
The tensors of rank zero are just the scalars (elements of the field F), those of contravariant rank 1 the vectors in V, and those of covariant rank 1 the one-forms in V* (for this reason the last two spaces are often called the contravariant and covariant vectors).
Here we used the Einstein notation, a convention useful when dealing with coordinate equations: when an index variable appears both raised and lowered on the same side of an equation, we are summing over all its possible values.
Formally, this means that tensors were introduced as specific representations of the group of all changes of coordinate systems.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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