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  2. Tensor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor

    For example, a bilinear form is the same thing as a (0, 2)-tensor; an inner product is an example of a (0, 2)-tensor, but not all (0, 2)-tensors are inner products. In the (0, M ) -entry of the table, M denotes the dimensionality of the underlying vector space or manifold because for each dimension of the space, a separate index is needed to ...

  3. Tensor (machine learning) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor_(machine_learning)

    In machine learning, the term tensor informally refers to two different concepts (i) a way of organizing data and (ii) a multilinear (tensor) transformation. Data may be organized in a multidimensional array (M-way array), informally referred to as a "data tensor"; however, in the strict mathematical sense, a tensor is a multilinear mapping over a set of domain vector spaces to a range vector ...

  4. Ricci calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricci_calculus

    [a] [1] [2] [3] It is also the modern name for what used to be called the absolute differential calculus (the foundation of tensor calculus), tensor calculus or tensor analysis developed by Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro in 1887–1896, and subsequently popularized in a paper written with his pupil Tullio Levi-Civita in 1900. [4]

  5. Tensor representation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor_representation

    In mathematics, the tensor representations of the general linear group are those that are obtained by taking finitely many tensor products of the fundamental representation and its dual. The irreducible factors of such a representation are also called tensor representations, and can be obtained by applying Schur functors (associated to Young ...

  6. Monoidal category - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monoidal_category

    In mathematics, a monoidal category (or tensor category) is a category equipped with a bifunctor ⊗ : C × C → C {\displaystyle \otimes :\mathbf {C} \times \mathbf {C} \to \mathbf {C} } that is associative up to a natural isomorphism , and an object I that is both a left and right identity for ⊗, again up to a natural isomorphism.

  7. Tensor (intrinsic definition) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor_(intrinsic_definition)

    A simple tensor (also called a tensor of rank one, elementary tensor or decomposable tensor [1]) is a tensor that can be written as a product of tensors of the form = where a, b, ..., d are nonzero and in V or V ∗ – that is, if the tensor is nonzero and completely factorizable. Every tensor can be expressed as a sum of simple tensors.

  8. Tensor operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor_operator

    In pure and applied mathematics, quantum mechanics and computer graphics, a tensor operator generalizes the notion of operators which are scalars and vectors.A special class of these are spherical tensor operators which apply the notion of the spherical basis and spherical harmonics.

  9. Tensor algebra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor_algebra

    In mathematics, the tensor algebra of a vector space V, denoted T(V) or T • (V), is the algebra of tensors on V (of any rank) with multiplication being the tensor product.It is the free algebra on V, in the sense of being left adjoint to the forgetful functor from algebras to vector spaces: it is the "most general" algebra containing V, in the sense of the corresponding universal property ...