Gyration tensor
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The gyration tensor is a tensor that describes the second moments of position of a collection of particles
where is the mth Cartesian coordinate of the position vector of the ith particle. The origin of the coordinate system has been chosen such that
i.e. in the system of the center of mass rCM. Where
In the continuum limit,
where represents the number density of particles at position .
Although they have different units, the gyration tensor is related to the moment of inertia tensor. The key difference is that the particle positions are weighted by mass in the inertia tensor, whereas the gyration tensor depends only on the particle positions; mass plays no role in defining the gyration tensor. Thus, the gyration tensor would be proprotional to the inertial tensor if all the particle masses were identical.
[edit] Diagonalization
Since the gyration tensor is a symmetric 3x3 matrix, a Cartesian coordinate system can be found in which it is diagonal
where the axes are chosen such that the diagonal elements are ordered . These diagonal elements are called the principal moments of the gyration tensor.
[edit] Shape descriptors
The principal moments can be combined to give several parameters that describe the distribution of particles. The squared radius of gyration is the sum of the principal moments
The asphericity b is defined by
which is always non-negative and zero only for a spherically symmetric distribution of particles. Similarly, the acylindricity c is defined by
which is always non-negative and zero only for a cylindrically symmetric distribution of particles. Finally, the relative shape anisotropy κ2 is defined
which is bounded between zero and one.
[edit] References
- Mattice, WL; Suter UW. Conformational Theory of Large Molecules. Wiley Interscience. ISBN 0-471-84338-5
- Theodorou, DN; Suter UW (1985). "Shape of Unperturbed Linear Polymers: Polypropylene". Macromolecules 18: 1206–1214.