Terilien
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What exactly is the exterior derivative? What is its motivation? how do you compute it? Most importantly why is that how you copute it?
Well, if you followed mathwonk's description that we use the exterior derivative because it makes Stoke's theorem work... then apply Stoke's theorem!Terilien said:Well could someone explain why we impose the condition d(da)=0. I think I understand but would still like an explanation...
Terilien said:Well could someone explain why we impose the condition d(da)=0, and it's not something to be "imposed" but is instead a consequence of the manner in which the exterior derivative is defined. I think I understand but would still like an explanation...
Terilien said:So I did understand it. One last thing, I'm not sure if I understand the modified leibniz rule very well. could someone prove it rigorously?
I'm talking about the liebniz rule between wedge products. I don't quite know how to prove it...:(
When doing exterior algebra, I'm very much used to writing the product asTerilien said:I was talking about the exterior derivative of a wedge product.
It's suppose to be something like, p^dq +-1^p (q^dp) or something along those lines. how do we get that?>
i know its silly but i really don't know how its proven.
That (generally) shouldn't be equal to d(p /\ q). So it's a good thing you didn't wind up with p /\ dq - q /\ dp.Terilien said:what i did was (p+dp)^(q+dq) -p^q. i evaluated that and got + p^dq +dp^q +dp^dq
what do we do with that?
Well, I'm not really sure what you're asking anymore.Terilien said:so where does the other thing come into play?
Terilien said:What exactly is the exterior derivative? What is its motivation? how do you compute it? Most importantly why is that how you copute it?
Terilien said:I was talking about the exterior derivative of a wedge product.
It's suppose to be something like, p^dq +-1^p (q^dp) or something along those lines. how do we get that?>
i know its silly but i really don't know how its proven.