26.16 GENERAL COORDINATE TRANSFORMATIONS AND TENSORS
so that the basis vectors in the old and new coordinate systems are related by
ej=
∂u′i
∂uj
e′i. (26.67)
Now, since we can write any arbitrary vectorain terms of either basis as
a=a′
i
e′i=ajej=aj
∂u′
i
∂uj
e′i,
it follows that the contravariant components of a vector must transform as
a′
i
=
∂u′i
∂uj
aj. (26.68)
In fact, we use this relation as the defining property for a set of quantitiesaito
form the contravariant components of a vector.
Find an expression analogous to (26.67) relating the basis vectorseiande′iin the two
coordinate systems. Hence deduce the way in which the covariant components of a vector
change under a coordinate transformation.
If we consider the second set of basis vectors in (26.66),e′i=∇u′i, we have from the chain
rule that
∂uj
∂x
=
∂uj
∂u′i
∂u′i
∂x
and similarly for∂uj/∂yand∂uj/∂z. So the basis vectors in the old and new coordinate
systems are related by
ej=
∂uj
∂u′i
e′i. (26.69)
For any arbitrary vectora,
a=a′ie′
i
=ajej=aj
∂uj
∂u′i
e′
i
and so the covariant components of a vector must transform as
a′i=
∂uj
∂u′i
aj. (26.70)
Analogously to the contravariant case (26.68), we take this result as the defining property
of the covariant components of a vector.
We may compare the transformation laws (26.68) and (26.70) with those for
a first-order Cartesian tensor under a rigid rotation of axes. Let us consider
a rotation of Cartesian axesxithroughanangleθabout the 3-axis to a new
setx′i,i=1, 2 ,3, as given by (26.7) and the inverse transformation (26.8). It is
straightforward to show that
∂xj
∂x′i
=
∂x′i
∂xj
=Lij,