Minkowski Inner Product and General Tensor/Matrix Question

Vorde
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Hello all.

I have a fairly rudimentary knowledge of matrices and broader linear algebra. This gets me in a lot of trouble when I'm following along the math of something fine and then I run into some matrix stuff and get stumped, like this. I'm a little bit confused on taking the inner product from the Minkowski Tensor to the actual number. I understand why (in the context of spacetime intervals) it makes sense to define the metric as diag(-1,1,1,1) = \eta\alpha\beta

What I don't get is that if you define the inner product of two vectors A and B as \eta\alpha\betaA\alphaB\beta (I hope I got the summation convention right), how do you get from the matrix form to the number -t\alphat\beta+x\alphax\beta ...(and so on)?
It is just a rule of matrices I don't know? Or is it a specific thing in this context.

Thank you
Also, unrelated: my textbook didn't explicitly say that the spacetime interval (squared) is equal to the inner product, is that true?
 
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It is, in fact, the standard matrix multiplication that you do know, but the order of multiplication is different- the only order in which those matrices can be multiplied. This would be interpreted as
\begin{pmatrix}t & x & y & z\end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix}-1 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 & 1\end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix}t \\ x\\ y \\ z\end{pmatrix}
= \begin{pmatrix}t & x & y & z\end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix}-t \\ x \\ y \\ z\end{pmatrix}= -t^2+ x^2+ y^2+ z^2
 
Ah, you're totally right. I wasn't thinking of the vectors as matrices.

Thank you
 
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