Curl of the transpose of a gradient of a vector: demonstration of an identity

traianus
Messages
80
Reaction score
0
I would like to demonstrate an identity with the INDICIAL NOTATION. I have attached my attempt. Please let me know where I made mistakes. Any suggestion? I am trying to understand tensors all by myself because they are the keys in continuum mechanics
Thanks
 

Attachments

Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
What sort of vector product are you using here \hat{e}_i \hat{e}_j?
 
tensor product
 
Is this question so difficult? Please help me: I am trying to learn tensors and I would like to know what my mistake is. Thanks!
 
Any suggestion?
 
Can anyone suggest a forum to post my question? Thanks
 
anything? please help!
 
?
 
Is my question too difficult? Please advise.
 
  • #10
I don't really understand what is meant by
\nabla(\nabla\times\mathbf{u})
and
\nabla \mathbf{u}.

For example, if \mathbf{u}=u_j\hat{e}_j, then \nabla \mathbf{u}=(\partial_i\hat{e}_i)(u_j\hat{e}_j)=\partial_iu_j\hat{e}_i\hat{e}_j.

But what is \hat{e}_i\hat{e}_j; the inner product between the unit basis vectors? Then the result would be a scalar instead of a vector.
 
Last edited:
  • #12
Any other input?
 
  • #13
?
 
  • #14
You should at least explain how you define \nabla u when u is a vector.
 
  • #15
The problem is at the very bottom line in the definition of a curl of a tensor. I found 2 definitions which contradict to each other. Mine is one of them. I will email the authors.
 
  • #16
I asked an expert. The question was not trivial. After a while I found out that there are different definitions of curl of a tensor.
 
Back
Top