The fifth dimention is a virtual reality where everything turned real inside this fifth dimension, and this dimension convinced people felt like they are inside it like they are in cyberspace.
2006-07-23 15:46:55
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answer #1
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answered by Eve W 3
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According To String Theory There Are 11 Dimensions. The Fifth Dim Is Curled Up Like The Other 5
2006-07-23 21:18:24
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answer #2
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answered by savvy s 2
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Do you mean dimension or dementia? There are various ways of classifying dementias. My girl is a psychiatric nurse, so she can tell one much about dementias. I know more about dimensions. Time may be considered a 4th dimension, but there are spatial dimensions numbered 4 to 11 in String Theory. No official name exists for any of them to the best of my knowledge. A 4th-dimensional figure bounded by eight cubes is a tesseract. No name has been given to a 5th-dimensional figure bounded by 16 tesseracts. You can try that, if you like.
2006-07-23 20:51:17
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answer #3
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answered by miyuki & kyojin 7
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Aw, shucks, there goes my "singing group" answer. Well, a cube with another dimension added would be a four-dimensional cube (5 dimensional because you have to include time as a dimension). It's impossible to draw something like that on a flat piece of paper, but if you step back one dimension, it would be like trying to describe a "cube" if your univese was only 2-dimensional. If you lived in a "flat" universe it would be hard for you to imagine what a cube is. I mean, you'd have length and width, but your height would measure exactly zero inches. You would have no clue what it would mean to move "up" or "down." In our 3-D universe, it is difficult to picture another dimension where you could move in a different direction other than the three axes of "real" space. In theory, the fifth dimension would be really, really tiny, since we're not aware of it. It would occupy every point in "our" space but its size would be smaller than "Planck size" (named after the Maxwell Planck, a physicist). Planck size is so tiny it would make an atomic nucleus look like the size of the visible universe by comparison. So, you can have a number of dimensions in "our space," as long as they are so tiny you can't detect them (yet?). A version of String Theory says that we live in a universe with 10 dimensions (not counting time). Curled up real small inside every point in "real" space" are 7 other dimensions. Those dimensions are necessary for String Theory because the theory says that sub-Planck length non-zero-point "strings" vibrate through all these dimensions, and it is the vibration patterns of these strings that determine the mass and atomic characteristics of, for example, an electron.
2006-07-23 21:16:52
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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In physics and mathematics, a sequence of N numbers can be understood to represent a location in an N-dimensional space. When N=5, one of these numbers is sometimes colloquially called the fifth dimension. This usage may occur in casual discussions about the fourth dimension. Abstract five-dimensional space occurs frequently in mathematics, and is a perfectly legitimate construct. Whether or not the real universe in which we live is somehow five-dimensional is a topic that is debated and explored in several branches of physics, including astrophysics and particle physics.
2006-07-23 20:37:50
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answer #5
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answered by DM 2
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Time..? Or is that the 4th dimension? If time is the 4th dimension, then the 5th dimension would be "fields of time". Can you imagine what that would look like if you were flying over it?
Me neither.
My buddy who was a Physics Major dropped a lot of acid and said he saw the 5th dimension. Too bad he didn't take any pictures.
2006-07-23 20:35:50
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answer #6
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answered by trixwagen 5
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I am not sure with the fifth dimension is, however string's theory suggest that there are possibly even more dimensions that are unable to be determined. I believe even up to 13 different dimensions. All I can see are the planes of X, Y, Z and time.
2006-07-23 20:55:51
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answer #7
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answered by Rachelina 2
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3 dimensions form a solid object. My guess is time is the 4th and movement is the 5th. But even solid objects comprise of 80% space, and 20% particles that move back and forwards so fast that it gives the appearance of something being solid. Even solid objects are not static, but ever changing.
2006-07-24 02:40:44
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answer #8
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answered by Jimbo 6
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www.rahul.net/raithey/otfw/dimensions.html
Look up " The Theory of Six Dimensions"
Vin
2006-07-23 20:36:24
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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A hypothetical alternate reality (correctly spelled "dimension").
2006-07-23 20:34:08
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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