Is mass density a scalar or a scalar density of weight -1?

AI Thread Summary
Mass density is typically referred to as a scalar, and when integrated over a volume, it yields a scalar quantity, aligning with conservation of mass principles. However, there is a discussion about whether mass density should be considered a scalar density of weight -1, given that volume transforms as a scalar density of weight 1. The consensus is that mass density in R^3 behaves as a well-defined scalar, remaining constant under coordinate transformations without picking up a density coefficient. In contrast, mass is coordinate-dependent and not a simple scalar, which leads to differences in how they transform. Overall, the conversation highlights the nuances of mass density, volume, and their respective tensor densities.
Rearden
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Hi,

I'm a little confused as to the nature of mass density. I've always seen it referred to as a scalar. Now by conservation of mass, when you integrate mass density over a volume, you get a scalar quantity. But volume transforms like a scalar density of weight 1, so shouldn't mass density transform like a scalar density of weight -1?

Thanks,
Rearden
 
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Hi Rearden! :smile:
Rearden said:
… mass density. I've always seen it referred to as a scalar.

I've always seen volume referred to as a scalar, even though (as you say) it's actually a scalar density. :wink:

I think this is because people are almost always interested in whether something is scalar as opposed to vectorial (or tensorial etc) …

in that sense, volume is a scalar, and so is (mass) density. :smile:
 
Neither quantities are vectors (that goes without saying), so they must be scalar quantities. The difference is that Mass is an extensive variable and Density is an intensive variable.
 
Rearden said:
Hi,

I'm a little confused as to the nature of mass density. I've always seen it referred to as a scalar. Now by conservation of mass, when you integrate mass density over a volume, you get a scalar quantity. But volume transforms like a scalar density of weight 1, so shouldn't mass density transform like a scalar density of weight -1?

Thanks,
Rearden

Yes, but +1 or -1 doesn't matter because 1/(-1)=-1.
 
I've been confused by the given answers (and question) for some time, clem and Tiny and
sophiecentaur. Mass density in R^3 appears to be a well-behaved scalar. Under a general linear coordinate transformation it remains constant; it doesn't pick-up a 'density' coefficient. Mass, on the the other hand, is coordinate system dependent, and is not a simple scalar, so that in going from m to cm, say, it picks up a factor of 1000. Tensor density values are additive, so mass density has a tensor density of 0. Volume has a tensor density of 1, and mass therefore has a tensor density of 0+1=1.

The keywords seem to be density, extention, Jacobian (determinant), and tensor.
 
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Can I have a reference to "mass density" from someone, please?
Or does it just refer to things like kg m-3?

I have a feeling that this conversation may be at a higher level than I initially thought and I don't want to appear any more dumb than necessary!
 
Hi sophiecentaur! :smile:

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor_density" :wink:
 
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Owch.
I did tensors in prehistoric times (1964) and managed to answer the questions correctly but none of us 'got' them, in my group.
I'll get my coat. . . . .
 
Sorry, I wasn't thinking hard enough about integration...I can see why it's an honest scalar now.
Thanks everyone!
 
  • #10
Phrak said:
I've been confused by the given answers (and question) for some time, clem and Tiny and
sophiecentaur. Mass density in R^3 appears to be a well-behaved scalar. Under a general linear coordinate transformation it remains constant; it doesn't pick-up a 'density' coefficient. Mass, on the the other hand, is coordinate system dependent, and is not a simple scalar, so that in going from m to cm, say, it picks up a factor of 1000. Tensor density values are additive, so mass density has a tensor density of 0. Volume has a tensor density of 1, and mass therefore has a tensor density of 0+1=1.

The keywords seem to be density, extention, Jacobian (determinant), and tensor.

Haha, you'll be back tomorrow sophiecentaur. Without your post I wouldn't have learned about 'intensive' and extensive'.

But wait a minute! Have I got this upside down and backwards? If I have a space filled with a substance having a density of 5 kg/m3, and change to centimeters, the value of the scalar changes from 5 to 5000, or kg/cm3.
 
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