chingkui said:
What will it like if the universe has another extra time dimension? Time, as I understand (or experience) it, can only has 1 dimension: there is past and there is future... so, how will an extra time dimension change the physics?
Hi all.
Well I am going off on my own here, and what I have to say has nothing to do with any branch of known physics which I have encountered. However.
In space, we have length, and length times Length which is area, (LxL or LL or L^2 or L^2 and Length times Length times Length which is volume (LLL, L^3, L^3and so on). We don't like to talk about LLLL, or any more L's than that. I am not sure why except that it is hard to think about and some famous people have said that it is impossible to think about. Oh well. For them maybe.
And then we do have multiples of time in everyday physics, only the multiples occur in the denominator, the inverse side of the ratio, under the division sign. For example, L/T (T for time) is velocity, and L/TT or L/T^2 is acceleration, and L/TTT is a quantity known in ballistics as jerk. Sorry about that but that is what it is called. I am not sure why physicists use these formulas routinely and still insist there is only one dimension of time, but there it is.
And then there is Einstein-Minkowski spacetime, in which our beloved uncle Albert and his math teacher agree that space and time are really the same thing. So we should have at least three dimensions of space and three dimensions of time, not?
But that is only six dimensions, if you accept my logic, which I have to warn you is not advisable. Please do not pester your physics teacher with this stuff, because I know for a fact that they will be very irritable about it.
Personally, I like the notion, which I have just now invented, that what we see around us and proclaim as real is actually the condensed spacetime dimensions described in Calabi-Yau maths. The other dimensions are the very large ones, open ended dimensions that, so far as we know, run out to infinity.
Anyway, there are some formulas in physics which involve numbers like c^5, which in my clumsey notation would be LLLLL/TTTTT. Ahem. That would seem to be five dimensions of space and five dimensions of time, or, as we can all add, ten dimensions. This is strictly unorthodox and again, has nothing to do with mainstream physics, and students of physics would do well to ignore it, as has been done for a couple hundred years now by everybody of any importance whatsoever. But I do assure you that c^5 really is a number used by ordinary physicists, altho I don't know of any who would say comfortably that it represents ten dimensions.
Now, then, I hope we are all satisfactorily tucked into wonderland, and that poor Micheal Jackson doesn't undergoe a horrific collapse in the courtroom. Too much imagination may not be a good thing after all. But as long as it keeps you studying physics and math, hey, why not? Only do take my advice on this, and keep your hands off of dimensions that do not belong to you.
nc