Three dimension space and one dimension time means

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the concept of dimensions, specifically addressing the phrase "three dimension space and one dimension time." Participants explore the nature of dimensions in the context of physics, particularly in relation to space and time as described in theories such as relativity.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants describe dimensions as the number of coordinates needed to specify a point's location, with three dimensions for space (x, y, z) and one for time (t).
  • Others discuss the implications of Einstein's special theory of relativity, noting that space and time are relative concepts that can intermix, leading to different perceptions of events based on relative motion.
  • A participant references Minkowski's work, suggesting that treating time as a fourth dimension allows for a geometric understanding of spacetime, where different viewpoints can be seen as rotations in four-dimensional space.
  • There is mention of the "relativity of simultaneity," highlighting how different observers may perceive the separation of events differently in terms of space and time.
  • One participant emphasizes that the universe can be described using a coordinate system that incorporates both space and time, suggesting a fundamental relationship between the two.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express various interpretations of dimensions and their implications in physics, but there is no consensus on a singular understanding of the phrase "three dimension space and one dimension time." Multiple competing views remain regarding the nature of space and time.

Contextual Notes

Some definitions and concepts presented may depend on specific interpretations of physics, and there are unresolved nuances regarding the relationship between space and time in different theoretical frameworks.

Caesar_Rahil
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Can someone tell what are dimensions and what does the line "Three diemsion space and one dimension time means". please. :confused:
 
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With the special theory of relativity, Einstein showed that space and time are relative concepts. If you watch somebody approach the speed of light, they will shrink in the direction of their motion and their clocks will slow down relative to you. In effect, their idea of "space" becomes a combination of your space and your time, and their time also becomes a combination of your space and your time. Things that are separated by distance but happen simultaneously to you may be separated by a shorter spatial distance to someone moving very fast but will be separated by a larger distance in time (and not happen simultaneously)...

In Euclidean goemetry, the space axes are relative. I may describe something as moving along my x-axis, and you may describe it as moving along a combination of your x- and y-axes. It is said that Euclidean geometry is invariant under a rotation of x-y-z space. (This can be shown by the equation [tex]x'^2+y'^2+z'^2=x^2+y^2+z^2[/tex].) Hermann Minkowski proved that if you treat time as a fourth dimension, then different relativistic viewpoints can be thought of as "rotations" in four dimensional spacetime. (This can be shown by the equation [tex]x'^2+y'^2+z'^2-c^2t'^2=x^2+y^2+z^2-c^2t^2[/tex], which is "Lorentz invariant".) It is similar to you claiming a point has the coordinates [tex]x=\sqrt{8}, y=0[/tex] and me claiming it has the coordinates [tex]x=2, y=2[/tex]. We can both be describing the same point if our coordinate systems are rotated among each other. In Minkowskain geometry, both space and time can be rotated, so time functions similar to a space dimension (with a conversion factor of [tex]T=\sqrt{-1}ct[/tex]).

As Minkowski said:
The views of space and time which I wish to lay before you have sprung from the soil of experimental physics, and therein lies their strength. They are radical. Henceforth, space by itself, and time by itself, are doomed to fade away into mere shadows, and only a kind of union of the two will preserve an independent reality.

The fact that space and time can be united into four dimensional spacetime is essential to the general theory of relativity, Einstein's theory of gravity. For further reading on relativity: http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Administrivia/rel_booklist.html
 
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A not very-rigorous definition of dimension is how many coordinates it takes to specify the location of a point.

Thus a plane is two dimensional - it takes only two numbers to specify the location of a point, x and y.

A volume is three-dimensional, you have to specify x,y, and z.

Space-time is four dimensional, you need to specify three dimensions (x,y,z) PLUS the time at which an event occurs (t), for a total of four.

An advanced sidenote: the coordinates used to specify position are required to be continuous. This means that if two points have numbers x,y,z, and t that are all close to each other, the points themselves are also close to each other.

The reason why we talk about space-time in relativity and not space and time is that the two can intermix. In relativity, one person may view two different events as being separated only in space, while another person may view the same two events as being separated in both space AND time. This is known as "the relativity of simultaneity", and is an important way in which relativity differs from Newtonian mechanics.
 
Welcome to Physics Forums, Caesar_Rahil
Caesar_Rahil said:
Can someone tell what are dimensions and what does the line "Three diemsion space and one dimension time means". please. :confused:
"Dimensions" indicate the extent of the universe...like if you were trying to set up a coordinate system to describe the universe. Our main model of how the universe works is that the universe is comprised of space and time. Matter and energy are things that reside in the universe...reside in the fabric of space and time.

In order to describe your motion through the universe, you would need to measure it with respect to space and time (for example, 10 kilometers per hour in some direction).

There are 3 dimensions of space (3 directional lines)...forward/back, left/right, and up/down...in which we are free to move.

There is 1 dimension of time (1 time line...forward/back or "future/past")...but we are limited to forward movement in that. If there was a second dimension time, we'd somehow be able to move left/right in time without going in the future or past. That would be weird, eh?
 
Thank you very much.
 

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