mewmew said:
Ok, this is a really stupid question but it is something that is really confusing me. I am confused on the concepts of dimensions, for example of a sphere and how they relate to Euclidean geometry. A sphere in 2 dimensions using Euclidean 3 dimensional geometry doesn't really make too much sense to me. I always thought of a sphere as having 3 dimensions so I am confused. I understand if its written on paper it is obviously in 2 dimensions but I am still confused, and what about even higher dimensions, how do those work as far as Euclidean geometry? I'm just really confused and any help would be great. Thanks
I think it's just a matter of definition. Mathematic defines a sphere to the surface of what is often taken to be a sphere in everyday terminology. The (n-1)-dimensional sphere S^(n-1) with unit radius, which, when thought of as living in an n-dimensional Euclidean space, is defined as
S^(n-1) ={(x1, x2, ... , xn} | x1^2 + x2^2 + ... + xn^2 = 1}.
So, for a mathematician, S^2 is something like the surface of a beachball. Mathematicians do make sure there is no confusion between S^2, say, and
B ={(x1, x2, ... , xn} | x1^2 + x2^2 + ... + xn^2 <= 1}.
These are very different objects, and so are given different names. B and its higher-dimensional cousins are called balls. So, to a mathematician, a sphere and a ball are quite different objects, while in everyday life they might be taken to be synonymous terms.
The "volume" of the sphere S^(n-1) is (2 pi^(n/2))/gamma(n/2). This gives the "volume" of S^2 to be the standard surface area expression 4 pi.
Now, an aside. All spheres are closed and bounded, and thus, by Heine-Borel, compact. It is easy to show that S^3 and the Lie group SU(2) are equivalent (homeomorphic) as topological spaces, so SU(2) is compact. This means that its unitary representations (important in quantum theory) are finite-dimensional.
Regards,
George