phy
i understand the concept of dimensions until we get to 3 but having more than 3 dimensions is beyond me. anyone care to explain? thanks.
wow, you took the words from straight out of my mouth. someone enlighten me too.Hyperbolic said:I may be slow and i still don't understand these higher dimensions however i would still like to know the point of these higher dimensions. So far I haven't found out their names or what they actually are. Could someone please enlighten me?
Hyperbolic said:I may be slow and i still don't understand these higher dimensions however i would still like to know the point of these higher dimensions. So far I haven't found out their names or what they actually are. Could someone please enlighten me?
selfAdjoint said:Sol,
You have to understand that U(1)is a photon
U(1) is a group. It's actually the group you get be rotating a circle through angles. The angles of rotation represent the phases of the EM radiation (or photon, if you prefer).
Think of a sine wave along the x-axis, and somewhere you mark a zero and put in the y-axis. Now the sine curve repeats itself every length of 2\pi along the x-axis, because it's the stretched out equivalent of going around a circle where the circumference is 2\pi times the radius. So where the y-axis cuts in corresponds to some angle or other, which equals some group operation from U(1) or other. This is the phase angle.
Now it's important that we can't detect this phase angle! Or what's the same thing, Nature doesn't give us a fixed zero to measure the sine curve of EM from, it's just an arbitrary convention. So the theory of EM is the same whatever phase angle you pick, or in other words, the operations from the group U(1) don't affect the physics. This is GAUGE INVARIANCE, the big noise in physical principles of the last 50 years. And U(1) is the gauge group of electromagnetism.
sol2 said:I saw this as I was reading your post:
http://wikibooks.org/upload/e/e2/Emwave.png
If you were to look at the end of this wave, and imagine a circle then we would see what you were saying?
Can you help bring clarity to this.
selfAdjoint said:I'm going to leave the discussion of the Kalusza Klein geometry and compactification till another time, if you don't mind.
selfAdjoint said:Sol, while I was looking for good papers on branes and the Standard Model (I found one!), I also found this wonderful Visual QCD site . I don't know if you've seen it before, but it might be a candidate for a link from your website.