Revision as of 08:08, 27 May 2009 by imported>Paul Wormer
In mathematics, a dyadic product of two vectors is a third vector product next to dot product and cross product. The dyadic product is a square matrix which represents a tensor with respect to the same system of axes as to which the components of the vectors are defined that constitute the dyadic product. Thus, if
then the dyadic product is
Example
An important use is the reformulation of a vector expression as a matrix-vector expression, for instance,
Indeed, take the ith component,
Generalization
In more general terms, a dyadic product is the representation of a simple element in (binary) tensor product space with respect to bases carrying the constituting spaces. Let U and V be linear spaces and U ⊗ V be their tensor product space
If {ai} and {bj} are bases of U and V, respectively, then
and
The dyadic product u ⊗ v is an m × n matrix that represents the simple tensor u ⊗ v in U ⊗ V.