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  1. What Is a Tensor? The mathematical point of view.

    Jan 26, 2025 · A tensor itself is a linear combination of let’s say generic tensors of the form . In the case of one doesn’t speak of tensors, but of vectors instead, although strictly speaking they would be …

  2. An Introduction to Tensors - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    In mathematics, tensors are one of the first objects encountered which cannot be fully understood without their accompanying universal mapping property. Before talking about tensors, one needs to …

  3. What, Exactly, Is a Tensor? - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Every tensor is associated with a linear map that produces a scalar. For instance, a vector can be identified with a map that takes in another vector (in the presence of an inner product) and produces …

  4. Are there any differences between tensors and multidimensional arrays ...

    Feb 5, 2015 · Tensor : Multidimensional array :: Linear transformation : Matrix. The short of it is, tensors and multidimensional arrays are different types of object; the first is a type of function, the second is …

  5. What are the Differences Between a Matrix and a Tensor?

    Jun 5, 2013 · What is the difference between a matrix and a tensor? Or, what makes a tensor, a tensor? I know that a matrix is a table of values, right? But, a tensor?

  6. What even is a tensor? - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Dec 8, 2024 · We call that an operator is (n, m) tensor (or tensor field) if it is a linear operators that takes m vectors and gives n vectors. Conventionally, 0 -vectors is just a scalar.

  7. terminology - What is the history of the term "tensor"? - Mathematics ...

    tensor - In new latin tensor means "that which stretches". The mathematical object is so named because an early application of tensors was the study of materials stretching under tension.

  8. notation - Tensors of order 3 - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    I'm wondering what a tensor of order 3 looks like, and what it's purposes are. I've seen them written down before, but they look like matrices; I'm probably not understanding the concept well. How ...

  9. Tensor-Hom adjunctions - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Mar 23, 2014 · It turns out the two bimodules you mention are isomorphic. Adjunction in general gives you the bijection you described. However, in the proof of the Hom/Tensor adjunction, the map that …

  10. manifolds - Difference Between Tensor and Tensor field?

    A tensor field has to do with the notion of a tensor varying from point to point . A scalar is a tensor of order or rank zero , and a scalar field is a tensor field of order zero .