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Dimensions |
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| Sep19-05, 08:23 PM | #1 |
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Dimensions
I understand that the definition of the number of dimensions of a vector space, but somehow that doesn't really help me with physical dimensions. How in practice do we know that our space is 3-dimensional?
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| Sep19-05, 08:57 PM | #2 |
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We seem to be able to specify the location of any particular object in our universe with 3 numbers. More complicated answer: Our space might have more than three dimensions, if speculative theories such as string theory turn out to be correct. However, any "extra" dimensions would be "curled up" in such a way that we don't notice them in our daily lives. |
| Sep19-05, 09:07 PM | #3 |
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I was looking for that answer...because I'm a bit skeptical about how. How do we prove that we can unambiguously specify any (and every) point in space with just 3 coordinates?
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| Sep19-05, 09:55 PM | #4 |
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Dimensions |
| Sep19-05, 10:27 PM | #5 |
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We, human, create mathematics and physics to describe the behaviour of the universe.
perhaps we can create an other way to describe the universe with extra demension. (M-theory describes the universe with 11 demension???) this is what I THINK. |
| Sep19-05, 10:52 PM | #6 |
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We use three dimensions because it seems to work for everyday life. Check out a topographical map -- they always hit the nail on the head, well almost always. And, we really can't draw a 4 or higher dimensional object. Nature makes our perceptions intelligible in three (or less) dimensions; why? Who knows. (The extra dimensions of string theory are just that, theoretical concepts. )
Regards, Reilly Atkinson |
| Sep20-05, 08:08 AM | #7 |
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This isn't something I know much about, so perhaps there is someone here that does know about it. I read recently that we can prove we are in three dimensional space because we can tie knots. Apparantely knots are only possible in three dimensions, but like I said, I don't really know any topology or knot theory.
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| Sep20-05, 10:09 AM | #8 |
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| Sep20-05, 10:11 AM | #9 |
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I recall a paper by Ehrenfest that provided some classical physics arguments (stability of orbits, Huygens Principle) that suggests that space is three dimensional. I presume that
"P. Ehrenfest, Proc. Amsterdam Acad. 20, 200 (1917). P. Ehrenfest, Ann. Physik 61, 440 (1920)." are the references, taken from the references of Max Tegmark's paper "On the dimensionality of spacetime" http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9702052 , which I haven't read. For more references, you might try scholar-googling "dimensionality of spacetime" "dimensionality of space" |
| Sep20-05, 03:44 PM | #10 |
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http://www.physicsforums.com/showthr...ight=dimension especially the last post by Mathwonk. Come to think of it, it's short, so I'll just quote it. So ultimately our notion of distance is what defines the dimensionality of space, because our notion of distance is what defines the "neighborhood" of a point, and we can determine the dimension of a space given only it's characterization as a topological space (the notion of "neihborhood"). Note that if we include time in our notion of "distance", we get a 4-d space-time, rather than a 3-d space. There aren't any obvious candidates to extend the notion of dimensionality beyond 4. It is possible that there could be more dimensions that are "rolled up", so that they are so small they do not affect distances very much on a macroscopic scale. |
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