Re: A three dimensional universe....to a 24 dimenstions object ! Anyone can explain



On Mar 20, 6:19 pm, "Monitor" <ideaqu...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
From Wiki ...

Five dimensions in physics

In physics, the fifth dimension is a hypothetical extra dimension
beyond the usual three spatial and one time dimensions. Some
scientists have speculated that the graviton, a particle thought to
carry the force of gravity, may "leak" into the fifth or higher
dimensions which would explain how gravity is significantly weaker
than the other three fundamental forces. The Kaluza-Klein theory used
a fifth dimension to unify gravity with the electromagnetic force, and
now is seen as essentially a gauge theory with gauge group the circle
group. M-theory suggests that space-time has eleven dimensions, seven
of which are "rolled up" to below the sub-atomic level.

In 1993 the physicist Gerard 't Hooft put forward the holographic
principle, which explains that the information about an extra
dimension is visible as a curvature in a spacetime with one fewer
dimensions. For example, holograms are three dimensional pictures
placed on a two dimensional surface, which gives the image a curvature
when the observer moves. Similarly, in general relativity, the fourth
dimension is manifested in observable three dimensions as the
curvature of path of a moving infinitesimal (test) particle. Hooft has
speculated that the fifth dimension is really the spacetime fabric.



baldeagle wrote:
In science and maths, the E8 is one of the most difficult puzzle which
no one can solve for more than a hundred year.
It has finally been cracked by a team of 19 mathematicians four years.
The final computation took more than three days' solid processing time
on a Sage supercomputer.

E8 is a 248 dimensional objects !? I could comprehend 3 dimensional
objects in our universe,...have difficulty understanding the 4th
dimension of time...in space. 248 dimensions in our universe...!!!

Anyone in this forum can explain how ways to comprehend more than 4
dimension ?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6466129.stm
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070319/ts_alt_afp/ussciencemathematicsf...- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


The fifth dimension .....is a hypothetical dimension. Mathematicians
have gone beyond the fifth dimension and now could use mathematics to
show conclusively that a 248 stucture could exist.

I cannot visualise how a fifth or 248 dimension universe could be
like.....For example, do we exist concurrently in different roles in
all the 248 dimension. (As shown in 'Back to the future' film)



.



Relevant Pages

  • PARTICLES & WAVES, CONTINUITY & DISCONTINUITY: Unified, Reciprocal, & Complementary
    ... defined or understood in physics, ... results of the 4, 5 and 6 dimensional space-time continuum of gravity, ... degree unit of electricity, the 5th dimension. ... The 5th dimension (5th ninety degree extension out of the four part, ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: re:Can Light Propagate without Space??
    ... > Back up your claim that my definition does not apply to physics. ... Theoretical Physics uses math instead of what physics uses - empirical ... If time was a dimension of space, ... has nothing to do with time rates. ...
    (sci.physics)
  • Re: re:Can Light Propagate without Space??
    ... > Back up your claim that my definition does not apply to physics. ... Theoretical Physics uses math instead of what physics uses - empirical ... If time was a dimension of space, ... has nothing to do with time rates. ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: In search of the perfect Disassembler
    ... Normal matter cannot exceed the speed of light. ... >> with you to guide me through the mysteries of modern physics ... So there>> must be another time dimension. ... There is obviously no>> evidence that such an extra dimension exists. ...
    (alt.lang.asm)
  • Re: re:Can Light Propagate without Space??
    ... >> Back up your claim that my definition does not apply to physics. ... "dimension" belongs to math and not to physics. ... reference frame of the observer. ... > to time rates, it is only a quantity and not a time rate. ...
    (sci.physics)

Loading