tensor

(Englisch)

Ausgesprochen als (IPA)
/ˈtɛn.sə/
Etymologie (Englisch)

Borrowed from New Latin tensor (“that which stretches”), equivalent to tense + -or. Anatomical sense from 1704. Introduced in the 1840s by by William Rowan Hamilton as an algebraic quantity unrelated to the modern notion of tensor. The contemporary mathematical meaning was introduced (as German Tensor) by Woldemar Voigt (1898) and adopted in English from 1915 (in the context of general relativity), obscuring the earlier Hamiltonian sense. The mathematical object is so named because an early application of tensors was the study of materials stretching under tension. (See, for example, Cauchy stress tensor on Wikipedia.Wikipedia)

Spannmuskel

Spannmittel

tensor

tensor

موتر

cálculo tensorial

tensorowy

العضلة الشّادّة

τανύων μύς

muscle tenseur

τανυστής

strekspier

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