The four dimensions of Space Time are one real dimension r=ct and three vector dimensions Ix + Jy + Kz. All the dimensions have units of meters. The idea of a dimension of time is an historical artifact.
They are living "things" from a space of more dimensions than the 3 dimensions of space and 1 of time that we live in and are aware of.
possible answer for 5th dimension!!!!!!!According to me the fifth dimension is not found between space and time, because according to some theories (not still proven), before the big bang when nothingness rules, there were 2 planes which was in 10th dimension, if we follows that unproven theory, nothing can be said that the fifth dimension found between space and time but in controversy, I can deduce that time is separated from all things, it acts on its own, whereas space is limited, if for instance we go beyond our universe, time will still be there!!! ANSWERAccording to string theory extra dimensions are needed. The 4 dimensions of space time are all curled in a way similar to the surface of a sphere were no point can be regarded as being any more central or on the edge than any other. So it makes no sense to think of time independent of the other dimensions.
No. Space is 3 dimensions: Width, Length and Height. Time is the 4th dimension.
The area of the box is immaterial. If this is just a normal math question then the answer is 3 dimensions. Length Width and Depth. If is a question ref mathematical theory, then Space and Time bring the answer upto 5, but for this you would have to be doing a degree.
Space is the enormous volume in which matter and energy are located and through which motion takes place. Space is observed to have three dimensions, which are length, width, and depth (or height). It is hypothesized that there may be more dimensions than the three that we observe in our daily lives. String theory gives space ten dimensions and M-theory gives it as many as eleven dimensions including that of time.
The concept of dimensions beyond the four known dimensions (three spatial dimensions and one time dimension) is purely theoretical and not yet proven. Different theories, such as string theory or M-theory, suggest the existence of additional dimensions, but their nature and characteristics are still a topic of scientific exploration and debate.
String Theory (as its predecessors Relativity and Quantum Mechanics) has only one dimension of time. However it has many more dimensions of space than its predecessors (both had 3 dimensions), as the simplest version of String Theory must have 10 dimensions of space, while more complex versions require more (with no defined upper limit known). The big question is "Why can't we detect those additional 7+ dimensions of space that must be present if String Theory is true?".
the fourth elements or the fourth dimension in the relativity is time. The space are the first three dimensions.
In physics, there are four known dimensions: the three spatial dimensions (length, width, height) and the fourth dimension of time. Some theoretical models propose additional dimensions, such as in string theory, where there could be up to 10 or 11 dimensions.
That depends upon the context of your question. Mathematically speaking you can have as many dimensions as you want, and work with them; so a 14-dimensional vector space is possible in mathematics and can be worked with. But mathematics is also used to model the world: Zero dimensions is a point One dimension is a line Two dimensions are a plane Three dimensions forming length, width and depth form the space we live in. Einstein extended the three dimensional space in Relativity by considering time as a fourth dimension creating a space-time model to explain things like gravity. More recently there have been attempts to unify the different theories about how gravity, quantum effects, nuclear forces, etc work. As a result the three dimensions has been expanded by String Theory to many more dimensions. For example Super string theory has 10 dimensions and Bosonic string theory has 26. Supergravity theory has an upper limit of (and preference for) 11 dimensions, whilst general gravity theory allows any number of dimensions (including 14).
Time is one dimension, not four. If you combine it with space, you can "visualize" it as four dimensions: three dimensions of space, one of time. Sort of visualize it - we can't really visualize four dimensions.
Physical objects can only be measured in three dimensions: length, width, and height. These dimensions define the size and shape of objects in space. Any additional dimensions would require advanced mathematical concepts like those found in string theory.
There are at least 4 dimensions in the universe - 3 space dimensions (length, breadth, depth), and one time dimension.Beyond this, no one is really sure.Some current theoretical physics models contain higher dimensions than this. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_theoryThere are many different versions of String theory, however - some with more dimensions. One type known as M-theory ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-theory ) has eleven space dimensions and one time, for a total of 12.However, the universe is thought to be so narrow across these extra dimensions that for all practical purposes there are really only 4 we have to consider.
yes,in geometry it is 3 dimensional ,but when you relate it to theoretical physics,according to einstein,space contains a 4th dimension,time.when combined together,the space and time,it is refered to as spacetime.the modern string theory also suggest that there could be a possibility that there could be 10 dimensions a more advance version of it,the m-theory,suggest there are 11 dimensions
Conventional knowledge has three spatial dimensions (and on of time) . String theory has about six more spatial dimensions curled up so tiny we have not been able to unravel them.
Yes In mathematics (topology) there are all number of spatial dimensions, from zero on up to infinity. In some fields there are even fractional dimensions!Modern string theory posits that there are 10 spatial dimensions and one time dimension in the universe. (these are real dimensions not theoretical constructs like infinte dimensional space)