Misplaced Pages

Antisymmetric tensor

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Totally antisymmetric tensor) Tensor equal to the negative of any of its transpositions

In mathematics and theoretical physics, a tensor is antisymmetric on (or with respect to) an index subset if it alternates sign (+/−) when any two indices of the subset are interchanged. The index subset must generally either be all covariant or all contravariant.

For example, T i j k = T j i k = T j k i = T k j i = T k i j = T i k j {\displaystyle T_{ijk\dots }=-T_{jik\dots }=T_{jki\dots }=-T_{kji\dots }=T_{kij\dots }=-T_{ikj\dots }} holds when the tensor is antisymmetric with respect to its first three indices.

If a tensor changes sign under exchange of each pair of its indices, then the tensor is completely (or totally) antisymmetric. A completely antisymmetric covariant tensor field of order k {\displaystyle k} may be referred to as a differential k {\displaystyle k} -form, and a completely antisymmetric contravariant tensor field may be referred to as a k {\displaystyle k} -vector field.

Antisymmetric and symmetric tensors

A tensor A that is antisymmetric on indices i {\displaystyle i} and j {\displaystyle j} has the property that the contraction with a tensor B that is symmetric on indices i {\displaystyle i} and j {\displaystyle j} is identically 0.

For a general tensor U with components U i j k {\displaystyle U_{ijk\dots }} and a pair of indices i {\displaystyle i} and j , {\displaystyle j,} U has symmetric and antisymmetric parts defined as:

U ( i j ) k = 1 2 ( U i j k + U j i k ) {\displaystyle U_{(ij)k\dots }={\frac {1}{2}}(U_{ijk\dots }+U_{jik\dots })}   (symmetric part)
U [ i j ] k = 1 2 ( U i j k U j i k ) {\displaystyle U_{k\dots }={\frac {1}{2}}(U_{ijk\dots }-U_{jik\dots })}   (antisymmetric part).

Similar definitions can be given for other pairs of indices. As the term "part" suggests, a tensor is the sum of its symmetric part and antisymmetric part for a given pair of indices, as in U i j k = U ( i j ) k + U [ i j ] k . {\displaystyle U_{ijk\dots }=U_{(ij)k\dots }+U_{k\dots }.}

Notation

A shorthand notation for anti-symmetrization is denoted by a pair of square brackets. For example, in arbitrary dimensions, for an order 2 covariant tensor M, M [ a b ] = 1 2 ! ( M a b M b a ) , {\displaystyle M_{}={\frac {1}{2!}}(M_{ab}-M_{ba}),} and for an order 3 covariant tensor T, T [ a b c ] = 1 3 ! ( T a b c T a c b + T b c a T b a c + T c a b T c b a ) . {\displaystyle T_{}={\frac {1}{3!}}(T_{abc}-T_{acb}+T_{bca}-T_{bac}+T_{cab}-T_{cba}).}

In any 2 and 3 dimensions, these can be written as M [ a b ] = 1 2 ! δ a b c d M c d , T [ a b c ] = 1 3 ! δ a b c d e f T d e f . {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}M_{}&={\frac {1}{2!}}\,\delta _{ab}^{cd}M_{cd},\\T_{}&={\frac {1}{3!}}\,\delta _{abc}^{def}T_{def}.\end{aligned}}} where δ a b c d {\displaystyle \delta _{ab\dots }^{cd\dots }} is the generalized Kronecker delta, and the Einstein summation convention is in use.

More generally, irrespective of the number of dimensions, antisymmetrization over p {\displaystyle p} indices may be expressed as T [ a 1 a p ] = 1 p ! δ a 1 a p b 1 b p T b 1 b p . {\displaystyle T_{}={\frac {1}{p!}}\delta _{a_{1}\dots a_{p}}^{b_{1}\dots b_{p}}T_{b_{1}\dots b_{p}}.}

In general, every tensor of rank 2 can be decomposed into a symmetric and anti-symmetric pair as: T i j = 1 2 ( T i j + T j i ) + 1 2 ( T i j T j i ) . {\displaystyle T_{ij}={\frac {1}{2}}(T_{ij}+T_{ji})+{\frac {1}{2}}(T_{ij}-T_{ji}).}

This decomposition is not in general true for tensors of rank 3 or more, which have more complex symmetries.

Examples

Totally antisymmetric tensors include:

See also

  • Antisymmetric matrix – Form of a matrixPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
  • Exterior algebra – Algebra associated to any vector space
  • Levi-Civita symbol – Antisymmetric permutation object acting on tensors
  • Ricci calculus – Tensor index notation for tensor-based calculations
  • Symmetric tensor – Tensor invariant under permutations of vectors it acts on
  • Symmetrization – process that converts any function in n variables to a symmetric function in n variablesPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback

Notes

  1. K.F. Riley; M.P. Hobson; S.J. Bence (2010). Mathematical methods for physics and engineering. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-86153-3.
  2. Juan Ramón Ruíz-Tolosa; Enrique Castillo (2005). From Vectors to Tensors. Springer. p. 225. ISBN 978-3-540-22887-5. section §7.

References

External links

Tensors
Glossary of tensor theory
Scope
Mathematics
Notation
Tensor
definitions
Operations
Related
abstractions
Notable tensors
Mathematics
Physics
Mathematicians
Category: