User:John R. Brews/Sandbox: Difference between revisions
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T_{11} & T_{12} &T_{13}&T_{14}&T_{15}\\ | T_{11} & T_{12} &T_{13}&T_{14}&T_{15}\\ | ||
T_{21} & T_{22} &T_{23}&T_{24}&T_{25}\\ | T_{21} & T_{22} &T_{23}&T_{24}&T_{25}\\ | ||
T_{31} & T_{32} &T_{33}&T_{34}&T_{35} | T_{31} & T_{32} &T_{33}&T_{34}&T_{35} | ||
\end{pmatrix} | \end{pmatrix} | ||
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Revision as of 19:14, 16 December 2010
Tensor
In physics a tensor in its simplest form is a proportionality factor between two vector quantities that may differ in both magnitude and direction. Mathematically this relationship is:
where v is a vector with components {vj} and w is another vector with components {wj} and the quantity Χ = {χij} is a tensor. This example is a second rank tensor. The idea is extended to third rank tensors that relate a vector to a second rank tensor, as when electric polarization is related to stress in a crystal, and to fourth rank tensors that relate two second rank tensors, and so on.
Tensors can relate vectors of different dimensionality, as in the relation: