aPhilosopher
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I calculated the christoffel symbols and know that I have them right. I want to take the covariant derivative of the basis vector field e_{r} on the curve s(t) = (a, t/a). I differentiate it and get s' = (0, 1/a) and according to the metric, this is a unit vector because a will always be equal to r. Every way that I take the covariant derivative, \nabla_{s'(t)}e_{r}, yields \frac{1}{r^{2}} for the e_{\theta} component and 0 for the e_{r} component.
If this is correct, then I don't know how I'm supposed to interpret it. the e_{r} component being 0 makes perfect sense to me but based on the formula for the circumfrence of a circle, I was expecting \frac{1}{r} for the e_{\theta} component.
Am I making a mistake in my calculations somewhere? If I'm calculating the covariant derivative correctly, what's the geometric interpretation of the square in the denominator?
Thanks for any replies.
If this is correct, then I don't know how I'm supposed to interpret it. the e_{r} component being 0 makes perfect sense to me but based on the formula for the circumfrence of a circle, I was expecting \frac{1}{r} for the e_{\theta} component.
Am I making a mistake in my calculations somewhere? If I'm calculating the covariant derivative correctly, what's the geometric interpretation of the square in the denominator?
Thanks for any replies.
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