Peregrine
- 22
- 0
In my struggles to understand index notation, I am trying to figure out how my book came up with the following transformation.
\frac {D \omega}{Dt} \cdot \omega = \omega_j \partial_j v_i \cdot \omega + \nu \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i \cdot \omega
=
\frac {D \frac{\omega^2}{2}}{Dt} = \omega_i \omega_j S_{ji} + \nu \partial_j \partial_j \frac {\omega^2}{2} - \nu \partial_j \omega_i \partial_j \omega_i
This is how far I got.
changing \frac {D \omega}{Dt} \cdot \omega to index notation yields
\omega_i \partial_o \omega_i + \omega_i v_j \partial_j \omega_i = \omega_i \omega_j \partial_j v_i + \omega_i \nu \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i
Looking back to the book's solution, this appears to say \omega_i \omega_i = 1/2 \omega^2? I thought it would be simple \omega^2?
Then, it is pretty clear to me that \omega_i \omega_j \partial_j v_i = S_{ji}, so the term
\omega_i \omega_j \partial_j v_i = \omega_i \omega_j S_{ji}
Finally, looking at \omega_i \nu \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i, I get, from the chain rule,
\nu \omega_i \omega_i \partial_j \partial_j + \nu \omega_i \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i
which can be rewritten as
\nu \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i \omega_i + \nu \partial_j \omega_i \partial_j \omega_i
So again, I run into \omega_i \omega_i = 1/2 \omega^2, which I don't understand.
First, have I don this correctly, and second, any ideas? Thanks much.
\frac {D \omega}{Dt} \cdot \omega = \omega_j \partial_j v_i \cdot \omega + \nu \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i \cdot \omega
=
\frac {D \frac{\omega^2}{2}}{Dt} = \omega_i \omega_j S_{ji} + \nu \partial_j \partial_j \frac {\omega^2}{2} - \nu \partial_j \omega_i \partial_j \omega_i
This is how far I got.
changing \frac {D \omega}{Dt} \cdot \omega to index notation yields
\omega_i \partial_o \omega_i + \omega_i v_j \partial_j \omega_i = \omega_i \omega_j \partial_j v_i + \omega_i \nu \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i
Looking back to the book's solution, this appears to say \omega_i \omega_i = 1/2 \omega^2? I thought it would be simple \omega^2?
Then, it is pretty clear to me that \omega_i \omega_j \partial_j v_i = S_{ji}, so the term
\omega_i \omega_j \partial_j v_i = \omega_i \omega_j S_{ji}
Finally, looking at \omega_i \nu \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i, I get, from the chain rule,
\nu \omega_i \omega_i \partial_j \partial_j + \nu \omega_i \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i
which can be rewritten as
\nu \partial_j \partial_j \omega_i \omega_i + \nu \partial_j \omega_i \partial_j \omega_i
So again, I run into \omega_i \omega_i = 1/2 \omega^2, which I don't understand.
First, have I don this correctly, and second, any ideas? Thanks much.
Last edited: