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A flat-torus as the geometry of space-time |
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| Apr15-12, 12:08 AM | #1 |
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A flat-torus as the geometry of space-time
New thread continuing a topic raised in 'Physical Space Properties Question'
And would time just be added on as an additional, orthogonal dimension? I'm a little confused about how/why this is considered flat. In the same wikipedia article, it says that a (2)cylinder is also flat---this is news to me. The analogy they make is that bending a flat piece of paper into a cylinder doesn't require any stretching/deformation of the paper. Okay. And I also realize that a 2cylinder would still have triangles whose angles add to 180 degrees... etc etc. These things definitely aren't true for the standard 2-torus in 3D; I would have assumed the 3-torus was the same. My understanding of differential geometry is rudimentary--only what I've gleamed from attempts at GR. I have no experience with 'topology' per se. None-the-less, equations would be welcome. |
| Apr15-12, 05:40 AM | #2 |
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The metric on this 2-torus in 3D-space would not be the regular one you have in our three-dimensional space. To see this, look at the lines in images like this one. They span a grid of equidistant lines - but in our 3D-space, they are not equidistant.
You can consider the 3-torus as three-dimensional cube, where the faces are connected via "magic". |
| Apr16-12, 01:25 AM | #3 |
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| Apr16-12, 07:37 AM | #4 |
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A flat-torus as the geometry of space-time |
| Apr16-12, 07:45 AM | #5 |
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| Apr16-12, 08:58 AM | #6 |
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I think Chalnoth means to say ..."wraps back on itself in three dimensions."
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| May7-12, 08:54 AM | #7 |
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What would be fun is to find a relationship that emulates what has been treated as "spacetime curvature". The way time appears always to move forward, and how gravity appears always to suck, may point to something about the motion of our massive manifold when projected within a toroidal topology. In such a case, what would it take to make it appear that space is performing a period expansion, or the reverse? With LHC warming up, and JWST soon to launch... great time to be in the field. |
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| geometry, spacetime, torus, universe |
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