Covariance and contravariance of vectors 共变和反变
(重定向自Contravariant vector)
In multilinear algebra and tensor analysis, covariance and contravariance describe how the quantitative description of certain geometric or physical entities changes with a change of basis. In physics, a basis is sometimes thought of as a set of reference axes. A change of scale on the reference axes corresponds to a change of units in the problem. For instance, in changing scale from meters to centimeters (that is, dividing the scale of the reference axes by 100), the components of a measured velocity vector will multiply by 100. Vectors exhibit this behavior of changing scale inversely to changes in scale to the reference axes: they are contravariant. As a result, vectors often have units of distance or distance times some other unit (like the velocity).