What Insights Does the Fourth Dimension Offer About Our Universe?

  • Context: Graduate 
  • Thread starter Thread starter timel0rd
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Dimension
Click For Summary
SUMMARY

This discussion explores the implications of four-dimensional objects interacting with our three-dimensional universe, using analogies such as a bowling pin and a balloon. It establishes that as a four-dimensional object passes through three-dimensional space, it manifests as changing shapes and sizes, akin to how a bowling pin appears in a two-dimensional universe. The concept of World Lines and World Sheets is introduced, illustrating how the history of motion can be represented in spacetime. The discussion concludes with the challenge of visualizing the four-dimensional hypersurface formed by world lines emerging from points on a closed surface.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of basic dimensional concepts (1D, 2D, 3D, 4D)
  • Familiarity with the concept of World Lines in physics
  • Knowledge of spacetime and its representation in theoretical physics
  • Basic grasp of geometric shapes and their properties in higher dimensions
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the mathematical representation of World Lines in spacetime
  • Explore the concept of hypersurfaces in differential geometry
  • Study the implications of higher dimensions in string theory
  • Investigate the visualization techniques for higher-dimensional objects
USEFUL FOR

The discussion is beneficial for physicists, mathematicians, and students interested in theoretical physics, particularly those exploring concepts of higher dimensions and their implications in our understanding of the universe.

timel0rd
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
To start, let's say I took a bowling pin and passed it through a two-dimensional universe. An observer in the two-dimensional universe would see a two dimensional slice of the bowling pin expanding and contracting as the bowling pin passed through their universe. Similarly, a 4-dimensional object passing through a 3-dimensional universe would appear to be an 3 dimensional object changing size and shape.

When a balloon is inflated, it changes size. Could the inflated balloon and the deflated balloon be different cross-sections of the same four dimensional object passing through out three-dimensional universe?

Could all motion simply be changing cross sections of four dimensional objects passing through our universe. Think of the two-dimensional universe again. If you took a 'V' and passed it through the two-dimensional universe, the observer would see a single object appear and then two objects break apart and move away from each other.
 
Space news on Phys.org
The history of the positions of a point throughout all moments in time forms a one-dimensional object in spacetime - a World Line. Likewise, the world lines emerging from all the points of a one-dimensional space-like curve delimit a two-dimensional "World sheet". If the space-like curve was a loop, the World sheet would be the envelope of a cylinder. Analogously, the world lines emerging from a space-like surface element would fill in the interior of this cylinder.

Now, we come to a point that I can no longer envisage intuitively. If you consider a closed space-like surface (a ball, for example), it cannot be encircled by a closed line uniquely (you may draw infinitely many circles on the surface of a ball), and I don't know how to envisage the 4-dimensional hypersurface formed by the world lines emerging from these points.

In any case, this hypersurface envelopes a region in 4-dimensional spacetime filled by the world lines emerging from the points interior to the closed surface (points inside the ball in our example).
 
Last edited:

Similar threads

  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
4K
  • · Replies 33 ·
2
Replies
33
Views
8K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 23 ·
Replies
23
Views
4K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
4K
  • · Replies 15 ·
Replies
15
Views
3K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
3K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
2K