Classical treatment of tensors
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A tensor is a generalization of the concepts of vectors and matrices. Tensors allow one to express physical laws in a form that applies to any coordinate system. For this reason, they are used extensively in continuum mechanics and the theory of relativity.
A tensor is an invariant multi-dimensional transformation, one that takes forms in one coordinate system into another. It takes the form:
The new coordinate system is represented by being 'barred'(), and the old coordinate system is unbarred(xi).
The upper indices [i1,i2,i3,...in] are the contravariant components, and the lower indices [j1,j2,j3,...jn] are the covariant components.
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[edit] Contravariant and covariant tensors
A contravariant tensor of order 1(Ti) is defined as:
A covariant tensor of order 1(Ti) is defined as:
[edit] General tensors
A multi-order (general) tensor is simply the tensor product of single order tensors:
such that:
This is sometimes termed the tensor transformation law.
[edit] See also
[edit] Further reading
- Schaum's Outline of Tensor Calculus
- Synge and Schild, Tensor Calculus, Toronto Press: Toronto, 1949