Galilean tensors
Phrak said:
In spacetime, E and B are elements of a 2-form called the electromagnetic field tensor on occasion.
Yes.
In 4-dimensional space-time, E and B are the six components of a 2-form, (E_x\,,\,E_y\,,\,E_z\,,\,B_x\,,\,B_y\,,\,B_z).
Loosely speaking, a 2-form is a tensor (a 4 x 4 square) with all the diagonal terms zero, and the above-diagonal terms equal to minus the below-diagonal terms.
So instead of 16 independent terms (= 4 x 4), 4 are zero, and 6 of the remaining 12 are minus the other 6, leaving only 6 independent terms, 3 of which are (E_x\,,\,E_y\,,\,E_z) and 3 of which are (B_x\,,\,B_y\,,\,B_z).
E and B separately
are 3-dimensional vectors - they
do obey the vector law of addition.
But if the observer changes to a different velocity, then E and B get mixed up with each other - so 3-dimensionally they are vectors, but 4-dimensionally they aren't, though together they are the parts of a tensor (or 2-form).
Oh, and this all works in
Galilean 4-dimensional space-time as well as Einsteinian - physicists knew about it long before Einstein came along!
[size=-2](Current isn't a 3-form. A 1-form is a vector. In 4 dimensions, a 3-form is the dual of a 1-form: so the dual of a vector is an "axial vector". I think angular momentum is a 3-form.)[/size]