If gravity isn't actually a force and it curves space but . . . — TiredThinker
Interesting. But when people grow it isn't necessarily uniformed and might further emphasize the 4th dimension as a time dimension rather than strictly spacial? — TiredThinker
(BOTTOM LINE)
Space is expanding. Theoretically, all the astrological objects, bodies, and groups are moving away from each other. This causes a shift in frequency causing light to change in color. 4d(t) uses that space to maintain momentum. — Rocco Rosano
time-Dilation — Rocco Rosano
Maybe if we experienced 4D space we wouldn't see curved lines created from gravity and in fact wouldn't experience gravity at all? — TiredThinker
There are three macroscopic dimensions of space. If you include time as a spatial dimension, there are four, but most don't include it as a spatial dimension since it has very different properties (x²+y²+z²-t²) than it would as a spatial dimention (x²+y²+z²+t²).If gravity isn't actually a force and it curves space but we don't notice it perhaps we only see 3 dimensions of space when there are actually 4 or more? — TiredThinker
You mean when somebody gets physically larger (from the child size say)? That just means you consume more 3D space at later times. In spacetime terms, it means your worldline is thicker at later times.But when people grow it isn't necessarily uniformed and might further emphasize the 4th dimension as a time dimension rather than strictly spacial? — TiredThinker
Your view of somebody (yourself or others) at a particular moment in time is a 2D projection. The thing itself at that time (not the image seen) is a 3D cross section (not a projection) of a 4D object into 3D space. Sure, anybody can project higher-D objects into lower-D space, but that projection alters the object and loses information. Looking at something doesn't destroy it, so I think it's a mistake to call it a projection. It's a cross section. The cross section of a sphere passing through a 2D plane is that of a circle that starts and ends small and reaches full diameter halfway through the process. The projection of the same sphere onto the same 2D plane is full diameter period. It's a picture of a sphere.I think recent research simulated 2D space and projected 4D objects into 3D space? — TiredThinker
That's reasonably accurate, yes.So maybe time isn't just strongly connected to space, but a spacial dimension itself with the attribute of duration and causality added to it? — TiredThinker
Dark energy is only there to explain acceleration of expansion. Expansion itself works just fine without DE, but it would decelerate over time if gravity was the only influence on it. It did decelerate for a long time (6-7 BY?) when mass energy was greater than dark energy, but once the mass density dropped below the density of DE, the acceleration took over.Is this your theory of dark energy - the mysterious force that's causing cosmic expansion? — Agent Smith
What other kind of time is there? What possible evidence is there of this other time if it isn't measured by a clock? Mind you, I cannot think of any physical process involving change that doesn't qualify as a clock. This includes one's biological sense of time. Paint peeling is a clock. All these are subject to dilation.What do you make of Willaim Lane Craig's (physicist theologian-philosopher) assertion that time dilation applies only to clocks and not "actual" time which remains unaffected? — Agent Smith
What 'lines' do you see? We cannot experience 4D space since we're 3D beings. You'd need to be a 4D spatial being to experience that.Maybe if we experienced 4D space we wouldn't see curved lines created from gravity and in fact wouldn't experience gravity at all? — TiredThinker
Most interesting. — Ms. Marple
For a mathematician four dimensions simply means one more variable to deal with. A three dimensional cylinder is a circular cylinder extending along the y-axis infinitely in both directions. Its four dimensional counterpart could be written which extends along the mysterious w-axis. Unfortunately, we are unable to see into this fourth dimension, only work with it mathematically. In this example a 3D slice of the 4D figure is a sphere.
Strange things happen when objects are "compressed" down from ND to (N-1)D. Here one sees a series of corrugated "roofs" being squeezed down from wrinkled 3D to a 2D flat square with a bizarre result. — jgill
I gave a few examles (paint peeling, radioactive substance, etc) in my prior post. I can think of only a few things (objects) that don't change over time, and thus don't act as a clock.Everything is a clock. I'd like you to, if possible, expand and elaborate that point. — Agent Smith
At a given time, it takes 3 coordinates to locate any particular piece of any object (a living being is no different than a house in this respect). At different times, that location may or may not change.What makes us 3D beings? — TiredThinker
This sentence (query?) lacks a verb. Dimensionality seems less complicated to me than what math can be. Yes, any 2D cross section of a sphere is a point or a circle, the former being a circle of zero radius.If dimensionality is more complex than math and simply running a 3D sphere through a 2D plane showing only a 2D circle?
Well I think I'm 4D and have little trouble experiencing them all, despite my 2D vision processing system. The two missing dimensions are trivially extrapolated.What if we could be made of and represented by more dimensions and still have trouble experiencing them all?
Yes, for the reasons posted above. Two coordinates is not enough to identify a location in space, but is enough to locate something on an image. Three is not enough to locate an event in spacetime.So we are at least 3D despite our visual system only seeing 2D images? — TiredThinker
4 are quite detectable. You seem to be asking if what we sense is a lower dimension cross section of a higher dimensional (5+) thing, which is like asking if the sphere passing through the plane is only aware of the circular cross section and not the rest of itself.So couldn't we be composed of 4, 5, maybe 6 dimensions even if we can't detect them, or they aren't necessary to be known for our survival?
No. A slow process is just like the hour hand on a clock as compared to the second hand. The hour hand isn't dilated in the proper frame of the clock, and it moves even slower relative to any other frame in which the clock is moving.Could we say that things that transform slowly (e.g. words etched in stone, inscriptions you see in archaeology) are in a sense travelling at relativistic speeds (time slows down for them) — Agent Smith
Time does not slow down for a fast moving thing since said thing is always stationary in its own frame by definition. You in the hypothetical spaceship would be stationary in your own frame and thus all processes around you including your sense of the flow of time proceed at the normal pace, and in your frame, it is all the processes of moving things around you (like Earth receding from you) that slow down (exhibit dilation).(time slows down for them) — Agent Smith
Certainly!four dimensional Euclidean space is not the same as four dimensional spacetime. — jgill
I wouldn't worry about how many dimensions there are -- as long as you are not walking near a cliff. All dimensions are inferred, hence imaginary. What you infer depends on what you are looking for. And mathematicians are comfortable with models of abstract (less than real) worlds. For example, some physics theories say the world must have 11 dimensions, and some mystical theories postulate a fifth dimension of mind. Also the currently popular Holographic theory says that our reality exists on the surface of a 2 dimensional bubble. Which implies that we are all Flatlanders, with no cliffs to worry about. :joke:If gravity isn't actually a force and it curves space but we don't notice it perhaps we only see 3 dimensions of space when there are actually 4 or more? We look straight and see different things from where we'd ultimately end up if there was a strong gravity. If we saw 4 dimensionally would we not see things only as if there were only straight lines and have it be accurate? — TiredThinker
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