This is probably a dumb question, but I'm a mathematician who's been trying to understand the equations of motion for Type IIB supergravity, and I'm not quite sure I understand what's going on with the Einstein equations. Specifically, I'm following the appendix A of this paper, and the equation I'm having trouble with is A.4. Here it is for clarity:
Rμν+2DμDνΦ−14H2μν=e2Φ[12(F21)μν+14(F23)μν+196(F25)μν−14gμν(F21+16F23)]
My understanding is that F1 is a differential 1-form, which we would write in components as say F1=fidxi, and that F21 is defined then to be:
F21=fifjgij
My problem is therefore that I expect
F21 to be a scalar. Indeed, I expect all the terms on the RHS of the equation to be scalars, and so I don't know what
(F21)μν means.
Small addendum: I am fairly sure that Dμ is the covariant derivative with respect to the metric connection, something I would normally call ∇μ, but I just wanted to confirm this.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2017-02-15 08:35 (UTC), posted by SE-user Mark B