Question about Space -- Is Space itself a 4th dimensional object?

AI Thread Summary
Space is not a fourth-dimensional object; it is three-dimensional, while time serves as the fourth dimension in the concept of spacetime. The universe is expanding, but this expansion refers to the increasing distance between objects rather than space itself being a tangible entity. The discussion highlights a distinction between general relativity, which is well-supported by observational evidence, and string theory, which lacks sufficient evidence to be considered mainstream. The idea that dimensions are perpendicular to each other is explored, but time's role as the fourth dimension is clarified. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the complexities of understanding dimensions within the framework of current physics theories.
SaniT404
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Ok, so I was just in physics class today and we were talking about special relativity... anyways, the instructor referred to how the universe is expanding, and so much so that there are places we could never ever get to because it's expanding fasterling than the speed of light. Anyways, this got me thinking about Space itself and I was wondering. Is Space in of itself a 4th dimensional object? Because clearly it can't be NOTHING if it is expanding... right? It's just intangible to us... so couldn't it just be a really big object perpendicular to the 3d matter on/in/around it?
 
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The local topology of our universe is 3-dimensional so spacetime also has 3 spatial dimensions.
 
SaniT404 said:
the instructor referred to how the universe is expanding, and so much so that there are places we could never ever get to because it's expanding fasterling than the speed of light.
This is not quite correct. See:



SaniT404 said:
Is Space in of itself a 4th dimensional object?
Space-time is 4D, space is 3D

SaniT404 said:
Because clearly it can't be NOTHING if it is expanding... right?
See this similar question:
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/on-space-time.783833/
 
Space is 3D where we have (x,y,z), then we add the third component, time or t, then we have (t,x,y,z) a 4D; which is why we call it Space-time. This t is most affected by massive objects such as black holes which not only bent space but also time.
 
SaniT404 said:
Is Space in of itself a 4th dimensional object? Because clearly it can't be NOTHING if it is expanding... right?
No, space is not a thing. The expression 'space is expanding' is a misnomer. It is more accurate to say the distance between distant objects is expanding.
 
So what I'm getting... that time is the 4th dimension, which is what I always thought. But then I saw several other places that changed the way I saw it. The first dimension would be considered a line. 2nd dimension is a square, which is simply a shape perpendicular to the 1st dimension. We can all agree with that as well, yes? So the third dimension is perpendicular to a square, or the second dimension. So the fourth dimension must be perpendicular to the third. That's where the tesseract come from. A 4d cube. If I'm correct, this is what the string theory operates on, 11 dimensions, all perpendicular to the dimension before it. So how then is time the 4th dimension... these 2 theories, einstein's and the string theory seem to conflict...
 
Those dimensions are all spatial dimensions, and some of the string theory ones are very weird indeed. String theory is not an accepted mainstream theory (meaning that there's not enough evidence to use it over competing theories) at this time, so even though string theory and GR conflict, we don't have a problem. GR has plenty of observational evidence to support it over competing theories. String theory has little if any.
 
Drakkith said:
Those dimensions are all spatial dimensions, and some of the string theory ones are very weird indeed. String theory is not an accepted mainstream theory (meaning that there's not enough evidence to use it over competing theories) at this time, so even though string theory and GR conflict, we don't have a problem. GR has plenty of observational evidence to support it over competing theories. String theory has little if any.
Ok, thanks, that helps alot!
 

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