jmlaniel
- 29
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I am trying to proove that the following relation:
A_{\nu} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A^{\mu} = A_{\nu} \partial^{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A_{\mu}
The only way I found is by setting:
A_{\nu} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A^{\mu} = A_{\nu} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} g^{\mu \sigma} A_{\sigma}
Then by imposing that the metric is the Minkowski metric (all constant), their derivatives are all equal to zero so I can get the metric out of the derivative and get :
A_{\nu} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A^{\mu} = A_{\nu} g^{\mu \sigma} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A_{\sigma}
Then by contracting the metric with the first derivative and renaming the indices, I can achieve my goal.
My question is the following one : can I achieve this without imposing the Minkowsky metric?
Thank!
A_{\nu} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A^{\mu} = A_{\nu} \partial^{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A_{\mu}
The only way I found is by setting:
A_{\nu} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A^{\mu} = A_{\nu} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} g^{\mu \sigma} A_{\sigma}
Then by imposing that the metric is the Minkowski metric (all constant), their derivatives are all equal to zero so I can get the metric out of the derivative and get :
A_{\nu} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A^{\mu} = A_{\nu} g^{\mu \sigma} \partial_{\mu} \partial^{\nu} A_{\sigma}
Then by contracting the metric with the first derivative and renaming the indices, I can achieve my goal.
My question is the following one : can I achieve this without imposing the Minkowsky metric?
Thank!