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The mathematics of general relativity are very complex. In Newton's theories of motions, an object's mass and length remain constant as it changes speed, and the rate of passage of time also remains unchanged. As a result, many problems in Newtonian mechanics can be solved with algebra alone. In relativity, on the other hand, mass, length, and the passage of time all change as an object's speed approaches the speed of light. The additional variables greatly complicate calculations of an object's motion. As a result, relativity requires the use of vectors, tensors, pseudotensors, curvilinear coordinates and many other complicated mathematical concepts. All the mathematics discussed in this article were understood before the proposal of Einstein's general theory of relativity. For an introduction based on the specific physical example of particles orbiting a large mass in circular orbits, see Newtonian motivations for general relativity for a nonrelativistic treatment and Theoretical motivation for general relativity for a fully relativistic treatment.
Tensors
A tensor extends the concept of a vector to additional dimensions. A scalar, that is, a simple set of numbers without direction, would be shown on a graph as a point, a zero-dimensional object. A vector, which has a magnitude and direction, would appear on a graph as a line, which is a one-dimensional object. A tensor extends this concept to additional dimensions. A two dimensional tensor would be called a second order tensor. This can be viewed as a set of related vectors, moving in multiple directions on a plane.
Applications
Stress, a second-order tensor. Stress is here shown as a series of vectors on each Vectors are fundamental in the physical side of the box sciences. They can be used to represent any quantity that has both a magnitude and direction, such as velocity, the magnitude of which is speed. For example, the velocity 5 meters per second upward could be represented by the vector (0,5) (in 2 dimensions with the positive y axis as 'up'). Another quantity represented by a vector is force, since it has a magnitude and direction. Vectors also describe many other physical quantities, such as displacement, acceleration, momentum, and angular momentum. Other physical vectors, such as the electric and magnetic field, are represented as a system of vectors at each point of a physical space; that is, a vector field.
Tensors also have extensive applications in physics: Electromagnetic tensor (or Faraday's tensor) in electromagnetism Finite deformation tensors for describing deformations and strain tensor for strain in continuum mechanics Permittivity and electric susceptibility are tensors in anisotropic media Stress-energy tensor in general relativity, used to represent momentum fluxes Spherical tensor operators are the eigenfunctions of the quantum angular momentum operator in spherical coordinates Diffusion tensors, the basis of Diffusion Tensor Imaging, represent rates of diffusion in biologic environments
Dimensions
In relativity, four-dimensional vectors, or four-vectors are required. These four dimensions are length, height, width and time. In this context, a point would be an event, as it has both a location and a time. Similar to vectors, tensors require four dimensions. One example is the Riemann curvature tensor.
Coordinate transformation
A vector v, is shown with two coordinate grids, ex and er. In space, there is no clear coordinate grid to use. This means that the coordinate system changes based on the location and orientation of the observer. Observer ex and er in this image are facing different directions.
Here we see that ex and er see the vector differently. The direction of the vector is the same. But to ex, the vector is moving to its left. To er, the vector is moving to its right.
In physics, as well as mathematics, a vector is often identified with a tuple, or list of numbers, which depend on some auxiliary coordinate system or reference frame. When the coordinates are transformed, for example by rotation or stretching, then the components of the vector also transform. The vector itself has not changed, but the reference frame has, so the components of the vector (or measurements taken with respect to the reference frame) must change to compensate. The vector is called covariant or contravariant depending on how the transformation of the vector's components is related to the transformation of coordinates. Contravariant vectors are "regular vectors" with units of distance (such as a displacement) or distance times some other unit (such as velocity or acceleration). For example, in changing units from meters to millimeters, a displacement of 1 m becomes 1000mm. Covariant vectors, on the other hand, have units of one-over-distance (typically such as gradient). For example, in changing again from meters to millimeters, a gradient of 1 K/m becomes 0.001 K/mm. Coordinate transformation is important because relativity states that there is no one correct reference point in the universe. On earth, we use dimensions like north, east, and elevation, which are used throughout the entire planet. There is no such system for space. Without a clear reference grid, it becomes more accurate to describe the four dimensions as towards/away, left/right, up/down and past/future. As an example event, take the signing of the Declaration of Independence. To a modern observer on Mt Rainier looking east, Hancock is ahead, to the right, below, and in the past. However, to an observer in medieval England looking north, the event is behind, to the left, neither up nor down, and in the future. The event itself has not changed, the location of the observer has.
Oblique axes
An oblique coordinate system is one in which the axes are not necessarily orthogonal to each other; that is, they meet at angles other than right angles.
Nontensors
A nontensor is a tensor-like quantity that behaves like a tensor in the raising and lowering of indices, but that does not transform like a tensor under a coordinate transformation. For example, Christoffel symbols cannot be tensors themselves if the coordinates don't change in a linear way.
High-precision test of general relativity by the Cassini space probe (artist's impression): radio signals sent between the Earth and the probe (green wave) are delayed by the warping of space and time (blue lines) due to the Sun's mass. That is, the Sun's mass causes the regular grid coordinate system (in blue) to distort and have curvature. The radio wave then follows this curvature and moves toward the Sun.
Parallel transport
The constancy of the length of the parallel displaced vector
From Dirac: The constancy of the length of the vector follows from geometrical arguments. When we split up the vector into tangential and normal parts ... the normal part is infinitesimal and is orthogonal to the tangential part. It follows that, to the first order, the length of the whole vector equals that of its tangential part.
The covariant derivative is a generalization of the directional derivative from vector calculus. As with the directional derivative, the covariant derivative is a rule, which takes as its inputs: (1) a vector, u, defined at a point P, and (2) a vector field, v, defined in a neighborhood of P.[6] The output is the vector, also at the point P. The primary difference from the usual directional derivative is that must, in a certain precise sense, be independent of the manner in which it is expressed in a coordinate system.
Example: Parallel displacement along a circle of a three-dimensional ball embedded in two dimensions. The circle of radius r is embedded in a two-dimensional space characterized by the coordinates z^1 and z^2. The circle itself is characterized by coordinates y^1 and y^2 in the two-dimensional space. The circle itself is one-dimensional and can be characterized by its arc length x. The coordinate y is related to the coordinate x through the relation y^1 = r \cos( x / r) and y^2 = r \sin( x / r) . This gives \partial y^1 / \partial x = - \sin( x / r) and \partial y^2 / \partial x = \cos( x / r). In this case the metric is a scalar and is given by g = \cos^2( x / r) + \sin^2(x/r) = 1. The interval is then ds^2 = g \, dx^2 = dx^2. \, The interval is just equal to the arc length as expected.
Curvature tensor
The Riemann tensor tells us, mathematically, how much curvature there is in any given region of space. Contracting the tensor produces 3 different mathematical objects: 1. The Riemann curvature tensor: , which gives the most information on the curvature of a space and is
derived from derivatives of the metric tensor. In flat space this tensor is zero. 2. The Ricci tensor: , comes from the need in Einstein's theory for a curvature tensor with only 2 indices. 3. The scalar curvature: R, the simplest measure of curvature, assigns a single scalar value to each point in a space. Each of these is useful in the expression of Einstein's field equations.
Notes
[3] Latin: vectus, perfect participle of vehere, "to carry"/ veho = "I carry". For historical development of the word vector, see and .
References
P. A. M. Dirac (1996). General Theory of Relativity. Princeton University Press. ISBN0-691-01146-X. Misner, Charles; Thorne, Kip S. & Wheeler, John Archibald (1973). Gravitation. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman. ISBN0-7167-0344-0. Landau, L. D. and Lifshitz, E. M. (1975). Classical Theory of Fields (Fourth Revised English Edition). Oxford: Pergamon. ISBN0-08-018176-7. R. P. Feynman, F. B. Moringo, and W. G. Wagner (1995). Feynman Lectures on Gravitation. Addison-Wesley. ISBN0-201-62734-5. Einstein, A. (1961). Relativity: The Special and General Theory. New York: Crown. ISBN0-517-02961-8.
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