Some theories allow for the possibility that other universes (some of which might have a different number of dimensions than our own) could exist, though it's generally believed that there is no possible way to actually observe these other universes.
The answer will depend on what dimension[s] you consider to be special.
Space can be divided into n different dimensions. Every dimension is orthogonal to rest all the dimensions. That is the dot product of x with y is zero (y not equal to x).
Flip the object a certain way so it is another dimension.
yes.
what is another varb word for dimension
It is a different dimension; a different universe. You can only view the dimension you are presently in.
no there is not once you enter a black hole you are crushed but your matter can be possibly shot out as radiation but other than that no there is no other universe or dimension based on my research
On the flip side of the map, in another dimension.
The word "universe" means "everything", so basicly, there's only one universe that includes everything everywhere. You can't "get to a different universe", because no matter where you "go" -may your target be a point in space, in time or a different dimension- you are always within the "collection" of everything, the universe.
They are different from one cathedral to another.
Even though black holes suck through parts of the universe, the universe is inevitably big, and growing so as the universe is being sucked into another dimension by black holes, it is also expanding.
what is another varb word for dimension
A higher dimension is exactly what it sounds like: a dimension that is different (higher) from length, width, and depth. Our world is in three dimensions, and a higher dimensional universe would have four or mroe dimensions.
It is unsure because when the big bang explode, space's dimension is expanding, which means the dimension will go on forever.
Another Dimension was created on 2009-01-12.
It is not possible for anything to go to another dimension.
The answer will depend on what dimension[s] you consider to be special.