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Sci-Tech Dictionary:

pseudovector

(¦sü·dō′vek·tər)

(physics) A quantity which transforms as a vector under space rotations but which transforms as a vector, together with a change in sign, under a space inversion. Also known as axial vector. A quantity which transforms as a four-vector under Lorentz transformations, but with an additional sign change under space reflection or time reflection or both.


 
 
Wikipedia: pseudovector

In physics and mathematics, a pseudovector (or axial vector) is a quantity that transforms like a vector under a proper rotation, but gains an additional sign flip under an improper rotation (a transformation that can be expressed as an inversion followed by a proper rotation). The conceptual opposite of a pseudovector is a (true) vector or a polar vector.

A common way of constructing a pseudovector p is by taking the cross product of two vectors a and b:

p = a × b

A simple example of an improper rotation in 3D (but not in 2D) is a coordinate inversion: x goes to −x, y to −y and z to −z. Under this transformation, a and b go to −a and −b (by the definition of a vector), but p clearly does not change. It follows that any improper rotation multiplies p by −1 compared to the rotation's effect on a true vector.

This concept can be further generalized to pseudoscalars and pseudotensors, both of which gain an extra sign flip under improper rotations compared to a true scalar or tensor.

Many occurrences of pseudovectors in mathematics and physics are more naturally analyzed as bivectors, following the calculus of differential forms; the double negation is natural for a bivector. However, bivectors are "less intuitive" in some senses than ordinary vectors, and since in R3 every bivector ab has a unique dual vector a × b, it is this dual which is more often used.

Physical examples

Physical examples of pseudovectors include the magnetic field, torque, vorticity, and the angular momentum.

Often, the distinction between vectors and pseudovectors is overlooked, but it becomes important in understanding and exploiting the effect of symmetry on the solution to physical systems. For example, consider the case of an electrical current loop in the z=0 plane: this system is symmetric (invariant) under mirror reflections through the plane (an improper rotation), but the magnetic field is anti-symmetric (flips sign) under that mirror plane—this contradiction is resolved by realizing that the mirror reflection of the field induces an extra sign flip because of its pseudovector nature.

To the extent that physical laws are the same for right-handed and left-handed coordinate systems (i.e. invariant under inversion), the sum of a vector and a pseudovector is not meaningful. However, the weak force, which governs beta decay, does depend on the chirality of the universe, and in this case pseudovectors and vectors are added.

References

  • George B. Arfken and Hans J. Weber, Mathematical Methods for Physicists (Harcourt: San Diego, 2001). (ISBN 0-12-059815-9)
  • John David Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics (Wiley: New York, 1999). (ISBN 0-471-30932-X)
  • Susan M. Lea, "Mathematics for Physicists" (Thompson: Belmont, 2004) (ISBN 0-534-37997-4)

See also


 
Best of the Web: pseudovector

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Sci-Tech Dictionary. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms. Copyright © 2003, 1994, 1989, 1984, 1978, 1976, 1974 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pseudovector" Read more

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