TheFerruccio
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I am back again, with more tensor questions. I am getting better at this, but it is still a tough challenge of pattern recognition.
Problem Statement
Prove the following identity is true, using indicial notation:
\nabla\times(\nabla \vec{v})^T = \nabla(\nabla\times\vec{v})
Attempt at Solution
Let U_{kp} = v_{k,p}
Then LHS:
\nabla\times(U_{kp})^T = \varepsilon_{ijk}U_{pk,j}
RHS:
\nabla(\varepsilon_{ijk}v_{k,j})=\nabla(\varepsilon_{ijk}U_{kj})=\varepsilon_{ijk}U_{kj,p}
I understand that I can swap dummy indices around however I like, and simply rename free indices, but, even then, RHS does not equal LHS, and I do not know what I am doing wrong. This is the final result I get.
\varepsilon_{ijk}U_{pk,j}=\varepsilon_{ijk}U_{kj,p}
I know that I am not supposed to change both sides, but I was doing this for reference, to get an idea of where I was going. I was going to reconstruct to end up with the RHS. What am I doing wrong?
Problem Statement
Prove the following identity is true, using indicial notation:
\nabla\times(\nabla \vec{v})^T = \nabla(\nabla\times\vec{v})
Attempt at Solution
Let U_{kp} = v_{k,p}
Then LHS:
\nabla\times(U_{kp})^T = \varepsilon_{ijk}U_{pk,j}
RHS:
\nabla(\varepsilon_{ijk}v_{k,j})=\nabla(\varepsilon_{ijk}U_{kj})=\varepsilon_{ijk}U_{kj,p}
I understand that I can swap dummy indices around however I like, and simply rename free indices, but, even then, RHS does not equal LHS, and I do not know what I am doing wrong. This is the final result I get.
\varepsilon_{ijk}U_{pk,j}=\varepsilon_{ijk}U_{kj,p}
I know that I am not supposed to change both sides, but I was doing this for reference, to get an idea of where I was going. I was going to reconstruct to end up with the RHS. What am I doing wrong?