Whenever you are asked to compute the trace of a tensor with two indices up or two indices down, you have to lower/raise one index and then compute the trace that you known
Thanks. I'm looking for a partner and mentor for a human powered aircraft project. I was formerly a software engineer, now I'm studying aeronautics and biomechanics
What you really do in linear algebra is not computing traces of matrices; matrices are just matrices. You really compute traces of linear operators, which are represented by matrices
When we say that the trace is invariant we mean that once we express the operator in another basis i.e. its matrix changes, the trace is preserved
You can think of gammas as operators but in another sense that we don't care about now. For all you care about now they are just matrices. The point is that - very roughly speaking - we have tensor indices and we should carry out the trace appropriately
I'm afraid I can't give you the equivalent of a one-semester linear algebra course now, given that I also have to go. For the time being just keep in mind that whenever you have a trace, it means "contract with the metric tensor"