Yang–Mills equations
0 sources
Yang–Mills equations
Summary
Yang–Mills equations is a partial differential equation[1]. It draws 106 Wikipedia views per month (partial_differential_equation category, ranking #4 of 8).[2]
Key Facts
- Yang–Mills equations's instance of is recorded as partial differential equation[3].
- Yang–Mills equations's instance of is recorded as equations of motion[4].
- Yang–Mills theory is named after Yang–Mills equations[5].
- Yang–Mills equations's part of is recorded as Yang–Mills theory[6].
- Yang–Mills equations's defining formula is recorded as \mathrm d_A\star F_A=0[7].
- Yang–Mills equations's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11j4r7gwdz[8].
- Yang–Mills equations's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Mathematics[9].
- Yang–Mills equations's in defining formula is recorded as \star[10].
- Yang–Mills equations's in defining formula is recorded as A[11].
- Yang–Mills equations's in defining formula is recorded as F_A[12].
- Yang–Mills equations's in defining formula is recorded as \mathrm d_A[13].
Why It Matters
Yang–Mills equations draws 106 Wikipedia views per month (partial_differential_equation category, ranking #4 of 8).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[14]