🧄Curl of the Dual Basis in Cylindrical and Spherical Coordinates

The computation for the curl of the dual basis vectors ( ×ea\nabla \times e^a ) in both cylindrical and spherical coordinates yields a null vector ( 0 ) in every case. This fundamental result stems from the general tensorial expression for the curl, which is proportional to the partial derivative of the covariant components of the vector, bvd\partial_b v_d. Since the covariant components of the dual basis vector $e^a$ are given by the Kronecker delta, vd=(ea)d=δdav_d=\left(e^a\right)_d=\delta_d^a, these components are constants (i.e., independent of the spatial coordinates). Consequently, their partial derivative is zero, meaning ×ea=0\nabla \times e^a=0. This result is further verified when applying the physical component formula, where the term being differentiated, hcv~ch_c \tilde{v}_c, also simplifies to the constant δca\delta_c^a, confirming that all components of the curl are zero in both coordinate systems.

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