resurgance2001 said:
Hi
No doubt this question has been asked by many before. I am new to the study of Relativity. I have spent several months reading this and that and generally getting very confused.
One thing that I just can't get passed is understanding even what the heck tensors are. Every single book or article that I have found that calls itself an introduction starts with a definition which just reads to my limited understanding as complete double dutch. Can anyone help explain in completely non mathematical terms what tensors are?
Gratefully
Peter
You can think of tensors as being objects (a lot like the objects in object-oriented programming) with the following properties.
1) They are defined at one point (and its nearby neighborhood).
2) They have methods which allow them to transform themselves into different coordinates. This makes tensors independent of coordinates. The new coordinates may in general be moving or even accelerating with respect to the old coordinates.
An example of things which are and are not tensors may helpl.
The electric field is not a tensor. It is incomplete - if you know the electric field at a point, you do not know and cannot know the electric field at that point from the point of view of a moving observer.
The magnetic field is also not a tensor.
The electromagnetic field CAN be represented by a tensor, the Faraday tensor, which combines information on both the electric and magnetic fields into one "object". When you know both the electric and magnetic fields at a point, you can compute both of them at that same point from the POV of any moving observer.
Note that a moving electric field generates a mangetic field, and a moving magnetic field generates an electric field. This is why neither one of them is a "complete" object alone.
These are probably the most important quantities of tensors. Another important quality is more difficult to define unless one uses mathematics - they are linear. This was important to the electromagnetic example above, but I won't go into that in detail as this is just a very rough overview.Because they are linear, they are a bit like the matrices of linear algebra. In fact, matrices are rank-2 tensors (and vectors are rank 1 tensors). Tensors are more general than matrices and vectors, though, because tensors of up to rank 4 are needed in general relativity.
This is probably a little over-simplified, but it should give you some general idea of what tensors are about. Mathematically, as the books you've read no doubt indicate, they are defined by their transformation properties.
To understand tensors at a mathematical level, I would suggest reviewing linear algebra, with a close attention to the duals of vectors. Duality is a key concept.
You'll definitely need calculus - if by some chance you don't have calculus yet, start learning it first (before tensors).