🧄Metric Tensor and Line Element in Non-Orthogonal Coordinates

This problem beautifully illustrates how a non-orthogonal coordinate system impacts fundamental geometric measurements. The most important result is the non-zero off-diagonal term in the metric tensor, g12=1g_{12}=1, which is the defining characteristic of a non-orthogonal system, confirming that the new basis vectors are not perpendicular. Furthermore, the diagonal element g22=2g_{22}=2 shows the basis vector E2E_2 is not normalized (it has a length of 2\sqrt{2} ). This non-trivial metric structure means that the formula for the length of a curve must include a cross-term (2dy1dtdy2dt)\left(2 \frac{d y^1}{d t} \frac{d y^2}{d t}\right), which accounts for the angle between the axes. If the system were Cartesian, this term would vanish, simplifying the line element back to the standard Pythagorean formula.

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