- #36
Rob Woodside
- 90
- 0
Sorry for the confusion, you are right. It is contraction and the indices must be upstairs and downstairs. I've seen things like Ricci = Tr Riemann meaning to contract the first and third indices or what ever convention one is using. I guess one should write Ricci = Con Riemann, but I've never seen it. At least I didn't use "Spur"
Pete, yes I 'd like a copy of Ohanian's paper, if it is not too much trouble. I mentioned this thread to a friend and he said there is nothing local about the curvature ! I exploded with: "The whole point of curvature was that the rotation of a vector parallel transported around a small arbitrary loop was given LOCALLY by the curvature tensor" He responded with: "It depends on second partials of the metric and that's non local" In reply to "Wadayamean?", he pointed out that you can't MEASURE curvature at a point. It requires the separation of neighbouring geodesics and that occurs over a small region and not at a point. The mathematical notion of local is "at a point". The physicist's idea of local is "in a small neighborhood" To sum up: the Curvature tensor is well-defined at each point and changes little over a small neighbourhood and is measured by geodesic separation (or vector rotation around a loop, etc) over this neighbourhood. Does this help or merely add more confusion?
Pete, yes I 'd like a copy of Ohanian's paper, if it is not too much trouble. I mentioned this thread to a friend and he said there is nothing local about the curvature ! I exploded with: "The whole point of curvature was that the rotation of a vector parallel transported around a small arbitrary loop was given LOCALLY by the curvature tensor" He responded with: "It depends on second partials of the metric and that's non local" In reply to "Wadayamean?", he pointed out that you can't MEASURE curvature at a point. It requires the separation of neighbouring geodesics and that occurs over a small region and not at a point. The mathematical notion of local is "at a point". The physicist's idea of local is "in a small neighborhood" To sum up: the Curvature tensor is well-defined at each point and changes little over a small neighbourhood and is measured by geodesic separation (or vector rotation around a loop, etc) over this neighbourhood. Does this help or merely add more confusion?