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Peeter
Sep5-08, 04:37 PM
The wikipedia article on Electromagnetic tensor has:

With the electromagnetic tensor, the equations for magnetism reduce to

F_{ \alpha \beta , \gamma } + F_{ \beta \gamma , \alpha } + F_{ \gamma \alpha , \beta } = 0. \,

Can somebody point me to an online reference that explains the comma notation please (or explain directly if not time consuming).

George Jones
Sep5-08, 04:42 PM
The wikipedia article on Electromagnetic tensor has:

With the electromagnetic tensor, the equations for magnetism reduce to

F_{ \alpha \beta , \gamma } + F_{ \beta \gamma , \alpha } + F_{ \gamma \alpha , \beta } = 0. \,

Can somebody point me to an online reference that explains the comma notation please (or explain directly if not time consuming).

For example,

F_{ \alpha \beta , \gamma } = \frac{\partial F_{ \alpha \beta}}{\partial x^\gamma}.

cristo
Sep5-08, 04:42 PM
The comma just means partial derivative: so, say, F_{ab,c}\equiv\partial_cF_{ab}\equiv\frac{\partial F_{ab}}{\partial x^c}

Peeter
Sep5-08, 04:50 PM
thanks guys. after posting I also found that answer in a different article:

Covariant_formulation_of_classical_electromagnetism

Is this well used notation? (it's not that much harder to write a D than a ,)

cristo
Sep5-08, 05:01 PM
Yes, the comma notation is well used: whilst it may not save much time in short expressions like that in the OP, it certainly saves a lot of time in longer expressions. You may also come across a semicolon: this generally means the covariant derivative.