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  1. Dec 11, 2014 · In the ninth dimension, we can compare all the possible universe histories, starting with all the different possible laws of physics and initial conditions. In the tenth and final dimension, we...

  2. Oct 16, 2021 · There are three dimensions that we experience daily, which define the length, width, and depth of all objects in our Universe (the x, y, and z-axis, respectively). However, scientists maintain ...

  3. Aug 1, 2023 · Sounds broad, right? Let’s start with the three dimensions most people learn in grade school. The spatial dimensionswidth, height, and depth—are the easiest to visualize.

    • Michele Debczak
  4. Mathematically, a four-dimensional space is a space that needs four parameters to specify a point in it. For example, a general point might have position vector a, equal to. This can be written in terms of the four standard basis vectors (e1, e2, e3, e4), given by. so the general vector a is.

  5. Jan 10, 2018 · Here there are the four large-scale dimensions of spacetime (described by general relativity), plus an extra six ‘compact’ dimensions (one for electromagnetism and five for the nuclear forces), all curled up in some fiendishly complex, scrunched-up, geometric structure.

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  6. Oct 9, 2012 · String theory has one very unique consequence that no other theory of physics before has had: it predicts the number of dimensions of space-time. But where are these other dimensions hiding and will we ever observe them?

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  8. The 10 dimensions of string theory are, a priori, not "coiled up" or anything else. They are derived for a string theory where the classical version of the string propagates in d-1 spatial dimensions and 1 temporal dimension, i.e. Minkowski space $\mathbb{R}^{1,d-1}$.

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