mnb96
- 711
- 5
Hello,
I consider the permutations \sigma_i, where i\in \{1,\ldots,n\}, of the following kind:
\sigma_i is obtained by choosing the i-th element from (1,..,n) and by shifting it to the first position; for instance \sigma_3 = (3,1,2,\ldots,n). The parity of \sigma_i is clearly (-1)^{i-1}.
For n=3, I would like to express the following sum based on \sigma_i-permutations in a compact form, using the Levi-Civita \varepsilon and Kronecker \delta symbols:
a_{123} - a_{213} + a_{312}
The first index is 1,2,3 so that would be easy to obtain with a repeated index, but I find the remaining two indices difficult to pull out by manipulations with the \varepsilon and \delta symbols.
Any help?
I consider the permutations \sigma_i, where i\in \{1,\ldots,n\}, of the following kind:
\sigma_i is obtained by choosing the i-th element from (1,..,n) and by shifting it to the first position; for instance \sigma_3 = (3,1,2,\ldots,n). The parity of \sigma_i is clearly (-1)^{i-1}.
For n=3, I would like to express the following sum based on \sigma_i-permutations in a compact form, using the Levi-Civita \varepsilon and Kronecker \delta symbols:
a_{123} - a_{213} + a_{312}
The first index is 1,2,3 so that would be easy to obtain with a repeated index, but I find the remaining two indices difficult to pull out by manipulations with the \varepsilon and \delta symbols.
Any help?
Last edited: