TENSORS
Thus, by inverting the matrixGin (26.60), we find that the elementsgijare given in
cylindrical polar coordinates by
Gˆ=[gij]=
100
01 /ρ^20
001
.
So far we have not considered the components of the metric tensorgjiwith one
subscript and one superscript. By analogy with (26.56), these mixed components
are given by
gij=ei·ej=δij,
and so the components ofgjiare identical to those ofδji.Wemaytherefore
consider theδijto be the mixed components of the metric tensorg.
26.16 General coordinate transformations and tensors
We now discuss the concept of general transformations from one coordinate
system,u^1 ,u^2 ,u^3 , to another,u′^1 ,u′^2 ,u′^3. We can describe the coordinate transform
using the three equations
u′
i
=u′
i
(u^1 ,u^2 ,u^3 ),
fori=1, 2 ,3, in which the new coordinatesu′ican be arbitrary functions of the old
onesuirather than just represent linear orthogonal transformations (rotations)
of the coordinate axes. We shall assume also that the transformation can be
inverted, so that we can write the old coordinates in terms of the new ones as
ui=ui(u′^1 ,u′^2 ,u′^3 ),
As an example, we may consider the transformation from spherical polar to
Cartesian coordinates, given by
x=rsinθcosφ,
y=rsinθsinφ,
z=rcosθ,
which is clearly not a linear transformation.
The two sets of basis vectors in the new coordinate system,u′^1 ,u′^2 ,u′^3 , are given
as in (26.55) by
e′i=
∂r
∂u′i
and e′
i
=∇u′
i
. (26.66)
Considering the first set, we have from the chain rule that
∂r
∂uj
=
∂u′i
∂uj
∂r
∂u′i
,