π¬compares a simple linear coordinate system with zero Christoffel symbols to a curvilinear system wit
Christoffel symbols are a measure of how a coordinate system's basis vectors change from point to point. In the linear coordinate system on the left, the basis vectors (vβ and vβ) are the same everywhere. Since there is no change, their derivatives are zero, which means all Christoffel symbols are zero. This holds true even though the system is non-orthogonal. In the spherical (curvilinear) coordinate system on the right, the basis vectors (β/βr and β/βΞΈ) constantly change direction. This change is precisely what the non-zero Christoffel symbols account for.
Previoushow the metric tensor in polar coordinates is used to compute the circumference of a circleNexthow an orthogonal coordinate system can still have non-zero Christoffel symbols if its basis vectors
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