In
physics, a pseudoscalar denotes a
physical quantity analogous to a
scalar. Both are
physical quantities which assume a single value which is invariant under
proper rotations. However, under the
parity transformation, pseudoscalars flip their signs while scalars do not. As
reflections through a plane are the combination of a rotation with the parity transformation, pseudoscalars also change signs under reflections.
Motivation One of the most powerful ideas in physics is that physical laws do not change when one changes the
coordinate system used to describe these laws. That a pseudoscalar reverses its sign when the coordinate axes are inverted suggests that it is not the best object to describe a physical quantity. In 3D-space, quantities described by a pseudovector are antisymmetric tensors of order 2, which are invariant under inversion. The pseudovector may be a simpler representation of that quantity, but suffers from the change of sign under inversion. Similarly, in 3D-space, the
Hodge dual of a scalar is equal to a constant times the 3-dimensional
Levi-Civita pseudotensor (or "permutation" pseudotensor); whereas the Hodge dual of a pseudoscalar is an antisymmetric (pure) tensor of order three. The Levi-Civita pseudotensor is a completely
antisymmetric pseudotensor of order 3. Since the dual of the pseudoscalar is the product of two "pseudo-quantities", the resulting tensor is a true tensor, and does not change sign upon an inversion of axes. The situation is similar to the situation for pseudovectors and antisymmetric tensors of order 2. The dual of a pseudovector is an antisymmetric tensor of order 2 (and vice versa). The tensor is an invariant physical quantity under a coordinate inversion, while the pseudovector is not invariant. The situation can be extended to any dimension. Generally in an
n-dimensional space the Hodge dual of an order
r tensor will be an antisymmetric pseudotensor of order and vice versa. In particular, in the four-dimensional spacetime of
special relativity, a pseudoscalar is the dual of a fourth-order tensor and is proportional to the four-dimensional
Levi-Civita pseudotensor.
Examples • The
stream function \psi(x,y) for a two-dimensional, incompressible fluid flow \mathbf{v}(x,y)=\langle \partial_{y}\psi,-\partial_{x}\psi\rangle . •
Magnetic charge is a pseudoscalar as it is mathematically defined, regardless of whether it exists physically. •
Helicity is the projection (dot product) of a
spin pseudovector onto the direction of
momentum (a true vector). • Pseudoscalar particles, i.e. particles with spin 0 and odd parity, that is, a particle with no intrinsic spin with
wave function that changes sign under
parity inversion. Examples are
pseudoscalar mesons. ==In geometric algebra==