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2007-08-24 17:38:27 · 6 answers · asked by Kurt Orlando Patterson 2 in Science & Mathematics Physics

6 answers

every thing exists in the 4th dimension.

time is the 4th D
http://www.tenthdimension.com/medialinks.php

if it exists in time, then it is at least 4d matter.

(example: 4D cannot exist without being in the 3rd. the 3D can't exist unless it is part of the 2D and the 2nd can't exist without the 1D)

matter is made up of atoms
which are made of electrons protons and neutrons.
all of which are made up of quarks.
and the rest is empty space. (within atoms)

many say the quarkes are made of "strings of energy" which exist in 11Ds.

so thusly all matter can be considered 11d matter

its called String Theory.

2007-08-24 20:25:56 · answer #1 · answered by Mercury 2010 7 · 0 0

2 dimensional has under no circumstances existed. it truly is a concept based totally on the observer (i.e. enjoying previous highway fighter video games on SNES.) you're finding at a three dimensional merchandise (television) and getting a 2 dimensional image back. in case you're to pose any form of argument for 3 dimensional products or photographs no longer latest, or latest in a 4 dimensional state of affairs you should first understand what being in a 4 dimensional subject is like.

2016-12-12 11:25:56 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes, it has to.

The problem is that we won't see 4D matter in a 3D world since we are limited to the normal 3D point of view.

Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity requires 11 dimensions to work, and experimentally it does and has been proven. String Theory requires at least 20 dimensions for it to work. What is in all these higher dimensions? Could Dark Matter and Dark Energy be lurking there?

The best explanation of dimensions was given in the book Flatland. There the author describes a 2D world with length and width only. A character goes into a square and closes the door, sealing the room. Then he is visited by a 3D object; a sphere. The 3D object exists in all 3 dimensions, but the 2D hero of the story can only see the 2D slice of it; since the intruder was a sphere the hero saw a circle with a growing then shrinking radius as the sphere passed through his world.

Therefore the 4D matter is right there in front of your face, but you can't see or interact, or even understand it because of your limited perceptions; just as the flatlander was limited by his 2D perspective.

Most of the Universe is missing; we know that dark matter can exist, because we know that dark energy exists. Dark Matter and Dark Energy are fudge factors to explain the unexplained missing mass and energy in the universe.

The big bang happened 13.7 billion years ago so the expansion of the Universe should be slowing, but instead it is increasing. Dark Energy was invented to explain that.

Dark Matter and Dark Energy could be normal matter and energy from a higher dimension. We can't conceive of it so we can't understand it. This may explain why we don't know what it is and why there is more of it than normal energy or normal matter.

Look back at Flatland again; the circle has an area which is smaller than the volume if that circle was a sphere. Yet the circle hero of the tale couldn't see all that extra volume of the sphere because he could only perceive one plane of it at a time. The same could be true with us. We don’t see what is right in front and all around us because we are not built to see it. Sort of like the fish in water to them it is like our atmosphere and we both pass through it without worrying about it; to us it is invisible. So the extension of yourself into higher dimensional space could be exactly what dark matter is.

Gravity is an unknown force, we can’t detect it only it’s effect, we can’t bend it, stop it, clock it, slow or and we don’t even know what makes it. The Graviton is a theoretical particle that could be the particle of gravity, but we don’t know if they really exist. What if gravity is a force expressed through higher dimensions. That could explain why it can be so easily defeated by a magnetic, but it can create the strongest force in the universe; a black hole. Maybe we are only seeing what gravity is doing to us when it comes from a higher dimension. If this is true then the Unified Field Theory has a chance and the graviton is actually the electron’s higher dimensional self.

2007-08-24 17:58:48 · answer #3 · answered by Dan S 7 · 0 0

No, but it can exist in 4-dimensional space-time.

2007-08-24 20:54:23 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Space and time are forever linked into space-time, one of Einsteins discoveries. So all matter exists in 4-D.

Most theories (M String theory for example) now involve some 11 dimensions, but all but three space dimensions and one time dimension are curled up into extremely small distances.

2007-08-24 17:58:09 · answer #5 · answered by BJ 4 · 0 0

Yes.

Consider a box or cube in a space, now draw a three dimensional object or shape around that cube . . . check your pen size : )

2007-08-24 18:27:26 · answer #6 · answered by elizabet 3 · 0 0

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