📢Ditch the Messy Math The Elegant Tensor Secret to Centrifugal Force

The fictitious centrifugal force, initially defined by the vector triple product Fc=mω×(ω×x)\vec{F}{c}=m \vec{\omega} \times(\vec{\omega} \times \vec{x}), can be elegantly transformed into a linear tensor expression, Fci=TijxjF{c}^i=T^{i j} x^j. By applying the standard vector triple product identity, the force is expanded to Fc=m[ω(ωx)ω2x]\vec{F}_c=m\left[\vec{\omega}(\vec{\omega} \cdot \vec{x})-\omega^2 \vec{x}\right], which allows for the direct identification of the components of the tensor as Tij=m(ωiωjω2δij)T^{i j}=m\left(\omega^i \omega^j-\omega^2 \delta^{i j}\right), where ω2=ωkωk\omega^2=\omega^k \omega^k and δij\delta^{i j} is the Kronecker delta. This tensor TijT^{i j} is symmetric and depends quadratically on the angular velocity ω\vec{\omega}, effectively encoding the force's linear dependence on the position vector x\vec{x}. Physically, the centrifugal force vanishes if and only if the displacement vector x\vec{x} is parallel to the angular velocity ω\vec{\omega}, meaning the particle lies along the axis of rotation.

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