dsaun777 said:
Thats great but what does it mean to take spatial and time derivatives when all there is are units of mass and cm?
Space and time are unified in special relativity.
You might want to consider - what does the Lorentz transform mean, when it writes
$$t' = \gamma t - \gamma v x / c^2$$
You see the same "mixing together" (to use the non-technical term) of time and space in the Loretnz transform. t' depends not only on t, it also depends on x. So t' = f(t,x). The basic conclusion that we arrive at with the geometrical approach to relativity is that space and time are unified.
From your question, I gather you consider time and space to be different. But if they are different why do we add the term ##\gamma v x / c^2## in the above transform? I.e. how do we explain that t' depends not only on t, but also on x?
To make a point a bit more relevant to your initial question, suppose we have some stress energy tensor in some frame S. And we write the continuity equations in frame S.
If we assume we have only one space and one time dimension, i.e. only x and t, we have only have 4 terms in the stress-energy tensor in this case, so we can write out the continuity equations longhand
$$\partial_0 T^{00} + \partial_1 T^{10}=0 \quad \partial_0 T^{01} + \partial_1 T^{11}=0$$
here ##\partial_0## means ##\frac{\partial}{\partial x^0}##, or, since ##x^0=t##, it means ##\frac{\partial}{\partial t}##. Similarly, ##\partial_1## means ##\frac{\partial}{\partial x}##.
It might be helpful to replacing the numeric symbols 0,1 with the alphabetic symbols t and x, in which case we'd write:
$$\partial_t T^{tt} + \partial_x T^{xt}=0 \quad \partial_t T^{tx} + \partial_x T^{xx}=0$$
Now, suppose we choose some different frame S', moving with respect to S. The important thing we need to have happen is that the equations in S' are satisfied if the equations in S are satisfied. The tensor transformation laws for T (i'm not sure if you've been exposed to them yet, I won't go over the details) combined with the chain rule from multivariable calculus allows us to insure that this is true, that when the equations are true in S, they are also true in S'.
I won't write out the chain rule in details, but I will point out that the chain rule says that ##\partial_{t'}## is a function of BOTH ##\partial_t## AND ##\partial_x##.
The reason the stress-energy tensor is set up the way it is, is to make this is manifestly true, to make sure a system that satisfied the continuity laws in one frame satisifies it in all frames.