For a continuous map $f:(M,g)\to (N,h)$, between Riemannian manifolds $(M,g)$ and $(N,h)$ we can pullback $h$ by $f$. Most experts take the trace from this new tensor and work with it, i.e. $\operatorname{tr}_g(f^*h)$ which I think is equal to $\lvert df\rvert^2$. I think there is a simple reason from Linear Algebra that perhaps I missed it that
Question: why they use trace (e.g. see this, this and this posts) and not determinant or any other operator?
One primary reason is that it is similar to $\operatorname{tr} A^tB$ that is an inner product over $n\times n$ matrices.
In the case of energy density of harmonic maps, $e(f)\mathrel{:=}\frac{1}{2}\lvert df\rvert^2$ is very natural operator because it is similar to (up to a constant $m$) the kinetic energy formula $E=\frac{1}{2}mv^2$ in physics.
But these are not sufficient to not consider the determinant (or any other operator) case. I want to know: Is the following expression meaningful and can it reveal nice properties of the space as well as trace case? or that is same as trace case? $$K(f)\mathrel{:=}\int_M\det_g(f^*h)d\mathrm{vol}_g.$$
It is also helpful remember that the trace is $\sum_i\lambda_i$ and determinant is $\prod_i\lambda_i$.