What is a TENSOR? (Really this time!)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

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  • @dopplerdog6817
    @dopplerdog6817 2 месяца назад +34

    Great video. Just a nitpick: the purple box at 45:10 is wrong, it contradicts what's at 48:47. The indexes should be the other way around, alpha up, beta down.

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад +13

      That's right, my apologies...
      I wanted to plug in the transformation law directly the way we have derived it in the basis and transforms video to make it more clear, so I put the basis vector indices up when they should be down (so vector components would have indices up), then it seems I messed up the rest accordingly!

    • @dopplerdog6817
      @dopplerdog6817 2 месяца назад +1

      @@MoreinDepth thanks. Nevertheless it's a great video, I appreciate you making content like this. Please keep at it, not everyone has a talent for explaining things, and you definitely do.

    • @eliasmai6170
      @eliasmai6170 2 месяца назад +1

      you can reply with a n-fold tensor product over a module. 😅

  • @hsenagrahdeers
    @hsenagrahdeers 2 месяца назад +19

    Simple, straightforward, yet not oversimplified. As things should be taught! I'm sharing this video with anyone who needs it!

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад +2

      That means a lot, I'm glad you liked it!

  • @calvinemrekaya
    @calvinemrekaya 2 месяца назад +10

    I really appreciate how you gradually introduced the topic, making it feel like having a companion throughout the journey. Good job!

  • @edd.
    @edd. 2 месяца назад +7

    Fantastic presentation. I’m self taught and I always learn little tidbits of info that pulls everything together tighter. Looking forward to more videos from you.

  • @aky68956
    @aky68956 2 месяца назад +7

    This is by far the best tensor explanation on RUclips. Other explanations either directly start with the geometrical viewpoint or run through vectors -> matrices -> tensors without any mathematical geometrical motivation. I like that you spend time on the prerequisite covector tooling. You also make it very clear how tensors are a geometric object in their own right (after normalising out the components).

    • @davidhand9721
      @davidhand9721 2 месяца назад +1

      Disagree strongly. Xylyxylyx has a series called "what is a tensor" and it's far more detailed and starts with the tensor basis, i.e. reciprocal spaces, from which all other aspects flow intuitively.

  • @ramazanmert7686
    @ramazanmert7686 Месяц назад

    A brilliant mind who is the one behind this magnificent video -someone I am proud to call my friend from our undergraduate courses on group theory and tensor algebra-recently asked me to critique his video introducing the concept of tensors. I’ve watched it multiple times and, to be honest, there is very little to criticize. His grasp of the subject is, as expected, flawless. I already knew this before watching the video. Some might suggest that a more physical introduction could precede the linear algebra portion, but anyone in the STEM fields should already be familiar with linear algebra. Well done, my friend. I’m sorry I couldn’t find more to critique, but that’s your fault for creating a video so close to perfection. Keep up the great work!

  • @xrete
    @xrete 2 месяца назад +2

    im going to share this to my friends thanks!

  • @gbporto9701
    @gbporto9701 2 месяца назад

    This video is awesome. Thank you, I'm a complete novice at this and could finally understand what tensors are and how they work thanks to your explanation, thank you!

  • @Uluru1410
    @Uluru1410 Месяц назад

    Great video, probably one of the best on this topic! Very much appreciated :)

  • @johnstuder847
    @johnstuder847 2 месяца назад +1

    Wow - thank you!
    So glad there are people like you that understand this stuff well enough to combine concepts and provide a high level summary without the details and rigor that obscure many of the important concepts. Well done! I kept hoping you would work my favorite subject in there - the Fourier transforms and the SVD, singular value decomposition, but hopefully you can do a video on how tensors and the Fourier transforms and SVD are related someday? Keep up the great work!

  • @seanvickery145
    @seanvickery145 Месяц назад

    I'm a hobbyist watcher of maths videos 🤓 and I've been interested to learn what a tensor is for years. Decades in fact: the word 'tensor' was mysteriously mentioned once, in passing, when I was studying 📚
    I'm watching this (22:00 in) and It looks like this video is going to deliver on its title. You've got my sub.

  • @rudypieplenbosch6752
    @rudypieplenbosch6752 Месяц назад

    Thanks for the clear explanation, some notations also got cleared 👌.

  • @frogstud
    @frogstud 2 месяца назад +4

    36:30 i believe the cross product is not a tensor, but a pseudo tensor because of a change of sign from orientation non preserving change of coordinates

  • @talkotlovker8226
    @talkotlovker8226 2 месяца назад

    I wish more videos were like yours, amazing teaching thank you very much

  • @jperez7893
    @jperez7893 6 дней назад

    tensors were hocus pocus before. minus the correction that is pinned, this is properly motivated and well defined and step by step. a lot of tensor presentations are not worth the time nor effort because they skip steps and defined too abstractly that it loses the intuition of the math. the term mapping clicked for me because i can visualize practical applications such as, geographical map overlaid on traffic, overlaid on satellite; mri scan of skin, digestive system, nervous system, etc. financial mapping for clients, creditors, banks, etc. i'm sure there are tons of applications but at least now i have a good idea how tensors work or can be applied

  • @handdarahanddara-nr6fu
    @handdarahanddara-nr6fu 2 месяца назад

    Love the focus on making stuff not scary

  • @Berk4569
    @Berk4569 2 месяца назад

    Great work! Concise explanation and fantastic presentation. I hope your channel grows (:

  • @JackDespero
    @JackDespero 2 месяца назад +1

    Very nice video. Thank you for sharing.

  • @BernhardMetz-u1f
    @BernhardMetz-u1f 2 месяца назад

    Awesome explanation! Thank you!

  • @mastershooter64
    @mastershooter64 2 месяца назад +3

    This is a really well made video👍

  • @domenicobarillari2046
    @domenicobarillari2046 2 месяца назад +1

    I respect your fine and obviously expert efforts to make tensorial objects much more approachable to newcomers. I would merely caution, as a physicist, "speaking" for budding physicists, to not let the vector-eating-machine picture of tensors be the only concept of tensors that students are left with (although I like it alot, after having been myself partly introduced to to general relativity using Misner, Throne and Wheeler's similar approach in their magnum opus "Gravitation" circa 1976.)
    The student should recognize that a tensor - which could, by the way, be just a (0,1) [vector] or (1,0) [one-form] object in your notation - has a physical interpretation in its own right. Your definition of the dot product draws on the larger meaning of the metric tensor as a local description of the shape of the manifold in which an area or distance is calculated, or in which other tensors (like vectors) are"multiplied". Objects like the stress-energy tensor (T_u_v) featured in the Einstein equation, or even the generalized Faraday tensor (F_u_v), have intrinsic meanings in themselves, as local energy densities or EM field intensities, respectively, in some local Minkowski frame.
    Thanks for your efforts nevertheless. DKB

  • @DeltaAlpha00
    @DeltaAlpha00 2 месяца назад

    The videos you make are awesome with great explanations! I really appreciate this.

  • @secondbeamship
    @secondbeamship 2 месяца назад +1

    A tensor is something that transforms like a tensor.

  • @iyadhchaker6811
    @iyadhchaker6811 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @kellymoses8566
    @kellymoses8566 2 месяца назад +1

    When tensors first "click" in your mind they are the most amazing thing.

  • @arekkrolak6320
    @arekkrolak6320 2 месяца назад

    I think identity is usually used for neutral element in multiplication, not addition, but perhaps this is not formal :) very educational!

  • @annaclarafenyo8185
    @annaclarafenyo8185 2 месяца назад +2

    The transformation law isn't something mysterious, it's just saying that tensors are "vectors of vectors", i.e. they are vectors, each of whose components are vectors. The linear map stuff follows immediately from this and the idea of invariance. It is important not to start with linear maps, because there are redundancies in the map notation caused by not having indices.

  • @ahmedeloufir
    @ahmedeloufir 2 месяца назад

    Excellent video !

  • @sonarbangla8711
    @sonarbangla8711 2 месяца назад

    The best introduction to geometric objects called TENSORS.

  • @gutzimmumdo4910
    @gutzimmumdo4910 2 месяца назад

    beautifully explained, thank you.
    finally someone understands that not everyone wants to be a fckng mathematician and reinvent and rediscover already known things, holly fck.

  • @davidhand9721
    @davidhand9721 2 месяца назад +1

    The Xylyxylyx explanation is still the best because it discusses what a tensor _basis_ is, which is what I was always missing because _everyone else_ just pretends it doesn't exist. The series is "What is a tensor?" on the channel xylyxylyx. Much better and much more detailed.

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад +3

      Thank you for sharing, it looks excellent and it inspires me to see such great content!
      In my own defense, of course a series with 40 videos is much better and detailed than my one video :=)!

  • @andrewphoenix3609
    @andrewphoenix3609 2 месяца назад +2

    Simple and straightforward you say! but what is a tensor used for in the real world.

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад +1

      I'd say it depends on the world! :=)

  • @weiqingdai6020
    @weiqingdai6020 2 месяца назад

    This is GREAT video

  • @biddu2683
    @biddu2683 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for this video

  • @aedanmckee8698
    @aedanmckee8698 2 месяца назад +1

    great video

  • @kashu7691
    @kashu7691 2 месяца назад +2

    you have a great style of teaching and taste in topic. do you plan to build on these topics?

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад +4

      Yes! I'm glad you've enjoyed it, there's much more to come!

  • @johelp549
    @johelp549 2 месяца назад +1

    small error: at 11:58 it should be (alpha dot beta) circle-dot v = alpha circle-dot (beta circle-dot v)

  • @pianodan1608
    @pianodan1608 2 месяца назад

    Very understandable!

  • @ozlemgungor6930
    @ozlemgungor6930 2 месяца назад +1

    Bravo

  • @Walczyk
    @Walczyk 2 месяца назад +1

    5:12 huh??? the cross product is not a real number. will you explain later??

  • @Kukuro20
    @Kukuro20 Месяц назад

    A Tensor is linear over the functions. This is the most bare bone, straight forward definition.

  • @secondbeamship
    @secondbeamship 2 месяца назад

    A monad is just a monoid in the category of endofunctors.

  • @robertbrandywine
    @robertbrandywine Месяц назад

    Multi-linearity isn't what makes a tensor, a tensor, is it? A simple mapping of a vector by its dual is also a tensor.

  • @jean-christophelelann6308
    @jean-christophelelann6308 2 месяца назад

    Really excellent ! Question : any good book about tensors in line with this presentation ?

  • @SargonvonThule
    @SargonvonThule 2 месяца назад +1

    well thats something my mind goes block in a few minutes, spescial i dont know what a tensor is at all. the math sounds solid but i have my problems with the handwriting..

  • @TheTIM333
    @TheTIM333 2 месяца назад +7

    Did you perhaps watch the lectures given by prof. Frederic Schuller?

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад +5

      Of course, I've learned about math, and learned even more about ranting about coordinates from him! :=)
      The lecture series Gravity and light are linked in the description for anyone looking for more details!

    • @TheTIM333
      @TheTIM333 2 месяца назад

      @@MoreinDepth I knew that your way of speaking about these is familiar immediately haha

  • @Goat-e3g
    @Goat-e3g 2 месяца назад

    Classical Physics by kip throne is actually 5 books what explicitly is the source

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад

      The full title of the book is "Modern Classical Physics: Optics, Fluids, Plasmas, Elasticity, Relativity, and Statistical Physics"

  • @weishanlei8682
    @weishanlei8682 Месяц назад

    Can a tensor flow?

  • @raymond_luxury_yacht
    @raymond_luxury_yacht 2 месяца назад +1

    When people ask me what a tensor is I say maths.

  • @nablavii
    @nablavii Месяц назад

    multilinear form - that's all

  • @myca9322
    @myca9322 2 месяца назад +3

    the creator of this video seems confused about the difference between a 'tensor field' (which is where a transformation rule such as that shown on the first slide is relevant) and a 'tensor' (a purely linear algebraic object).
    at least, that's what it seemed from the first few minutes. i'm undecided whether i want to give the rest a try, is this addressed later on?

  • @Rudenich911
    @Rudenich911 2 месяца назад

    👍

  • @MonzurulHoque3141
    @MonzurulHoque3141 2 месяца назад +1

    Your voice, accent are identical with @Let's Talk Religion 🤔

  • @CrazyShores
    @CrazyShores 2 месяца назад

    Here 38:05 NOT CLEAR AT ALL !!

  • @Fereydoon.Shekofte
    @Fereydoon.Shekofte 2 месяца назад

    Hi dear 🎉❤
    I joined just now
    Hope find guides and answers for my questions 😊😊

  • @MrSomethingdark
    @MrSomethingdark 2 месяца назад +2

    Most people are rude, ignorant, nasty morons. That is so true

  • @writerightmathnation9481
    @writerightmathnation9481 2 месяца назад +1

    You’re sloppiness is a very bad start. Calling multi linear transformation linear is absurd. It just isn’t true. It makes no sense. It introduces contradictions into mathematics; don’t do it.

  • @deanrubine2955
    @deanrubine2955 Месяц назад

    They're not axioms of a vector space, they're the definition of a vector space. We prove a particular structure is a vector space by showing that it satisfies the definition.

  • @dullyvampir83
    @dullyvampir83 2 месяца назад +2

    Few things I have ever hated as the einstein sum convention. So much extra work for students so the teacher can spare a few strokes with the chalk. Everything becomes a mini puzzle you have to decipher in order to make sense of the expression on top of everything else. I liked the video overall, but the entire topic feels like physics has gone wrong, the example with the vector product looks encredible scetchy, define a map by not plugging an argument in, really?

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад

      But the point there is that the new vector (or covector) that you define by leaving a slot open is also a map. It has one slot open into which you can plug in a covector (or vector). So leaving a slot open means you have contracted the filled slots, the result is a smaller piece of that map. This is also done in multivariable calculus, say you have a function f = f(x,y). If you want to only consider the part of the map that takes in x, you would plug in y=0 which "projects" the map onto the f=f(x) axes. So f = f(_ , 0) with a constant y plugged in and the x slot open gives you another map, which is a 2D slice of the more general 3D map.
      And that is precisely where the Einstein summation convention comes in handy, it doesn't only save chalk, the index notation makes these maps more clear and concise, albeit it takes some getting used to.
      Hey I'd say when Einstein does physics in some way it is rarely ever the wrong way to do it! ;)

  • @TheOneMaddin
    @TheOneMaddin 2 месяца назад +51

    If you want to give a quick intuitive explanation for tensors, don't start with a lecture on linear algebra. Give us the explanation in a concise form. If you haven't heard of linear algebra, you don't click on a video with this title. And if you do, the content goes over your head no matter your introduction.

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад +35

      Thanks for your feedback! That was very much my intention, it's why I've started with examples of tensors instead of going right into the formalism. That being said there is a price to pay to make the video as self-contained as it can be, and it comes in the form of going over the basics!

    • @ihatepotatoiguess
      @ihatepotatoiguess 2 месяца назад

      Haven't you learned it in hs tho? I am currently in 11th grade and I can easily grasp everything

    • @Vile_D
      @Vile_D 2 месяца назад +22

      ​@@MoreinDepth I also do think that going through the foundations is the way to go around about this. I've watched other videos explaining tensors by starting from the Einstein notation, you kinda actually get a bit of the notions of how it works, but not as much deep intuition.
      I consider you're amazing by making everything so consice. To be fit in around an 1 hour, you managed to make the concepts so meaningfull for such a topic as this one.
      Obviously the viewer needs to be already somewhat familiar with some topics, there are a bunch of concepts that need to be already well understood before diving here

    • @AscendingAdventures
      @AscendingAdventures 2 месяца назад +17

      You do realize you can skip with the bar under the video right?

    • @kumoyuki
      @kumoyuki 2 месяца назад +5

      Actually the relationship between vectors and covectors was one that I never had really grasped before this, but my primary knowledge of Lin Alg is at least four decades old now, so *I* can't even remember what I once knew. I stumbled into a lot of related areas of mathematics through work I did in CS on types & category theory and this actually connected quite a few dots for me.

  • @RichardFeinman-yf7lx
    @RichardFeinman-yf7lx 2 месяца назад +5

    Very clear if you know what a tensor is, as indicated by the comments. Else, completely useless.

  • @Pillow_Cat
    @Pillow_Cat Месяц назад

    Not the type of explanation i ever able to understand, even knowledge of what tensors are didnt helps lol.

  • @hosoiarchives4858
    @hosoiarchives4858 2 месяца назад +1

    Another bad tensor video

  • @teretx566
    @teretx566 2 месяца назад +1

    I think you can do better than this. Just try a little harder 😊

  • @andrejgrebenc3235
    @andrejgrebenc3235 2 месяца назад +4

    Not very clear presentation.

    • @MoreinDepth
      @MoreinDepth  2 месяца назад +8

      Your feedback is important as I'm very new at this! I'd appreciate if you would evaluate on that :)

    • @shervinanousheh3508
      @shervinanousheh3508 2 месяца назад +5

      @@MoreinDepth now that's mature. Bravo!

  • @glcpit7797
    @glcpit7797 2 месяца назад +2

    does not seems clearly exposed which real number corresponds to tensor application ... there is confusion between matrix and applications .

    • @robertbrandywine
      @robertbrandywine Месяц назад

      Aren't the scalar entries in the matrix the result of the tensor application?