Visualizing Components of Energy Momentum Tensor

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Visualizing the components of the energy momentum tensor involves understanding how momentum flows in different directions, particularly how the x component of momentum can flow in the z direction. One effective method is to represent the tensor as the surface of a cube, where diagonal components correspond to pressure and tangential components relate to shear. Specifically, components like T_xz and T_zx can be illustrated as acting on the cube in similar ways, highlighting the symmetry of the stress tensor. While this geometric representation is somewhat simplistic and may not apply to all tensors, it provides a foundational understanding of the energy-momentum tensor, which can also be visualized as an ellipsoid due to its symmetric nature. This approach aids in grasping the complex interactions within the tensor.
quantumfireball
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How to visualize thhe components of the energy tensor?
I mean to say that what it means to say that "the amount of x component of momentum flowing in the z direction per unit time"??
how can x compononent of momentum flow in some other direction
how to visulaize this geometricallty?
 
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One way is to consider a second rank tensor (T_ij, for example) as the surface of a cube. On each face there are three orthogonal directions, one perpendicular and two tangent to the face.

The perpendicular components, taken together, are the diagnonal components of the tensor and correspond to pressure- the component acts to compress or expand the cube. The tangential components correspnd to shear- the action is to convert the cube into a rhombus.

So, T_xz could be visualized as a unit area oriented in the yz plane, and you are interested in the in-plane component pointing along the z-axis. T_zx would be a unit are lying in the xy plane, with the component of interest pointing in the x-direction. If you draw this out, you will see that those two components T_xz and T_zx act to deform the cube the same way, and indeed the stress tensor is almost always symmetric.

It's crude and doesn't translate well to other stress-energy tensors like the Maxell tensor, but it's usually good enough.
 
Since the energy-momentum tensor is typically symmetric, you could try to visualize it as an ellipsoid.
 
For simple comparison, I think the same thought process can be followed as a block slides down a hill, - for block down hill, simple starting PE of mgh to final max KE 0.5mv^2 - comparing PE1 to max KE2 would result in finding the work friction did through the process. efficiency is just 100*KE2/PE1. If a mousetrap car travels along a flat surface, a starting PE of 0.5 k th^2 can be measured and maximum velocity of the car can also be measured. If energy efficiency is defined by...

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