The fourth dimension.
Yes. The 4th dimension is time. According to String Theory (which is unverified), there may be as many as 11 dimensions, but dimensions above the fourth are hypothetical.
sure, why not
The fourth dimension is time. To meet with someone you must give the intersecting streets, which represent the x and y co-ordinates. The floor number gives the elevation, plus or minus, and the time (10:30 e.g.). Miss any one of them and the rendezvous won't happen.
Yes.
Albert Einstein stated that time is the fourth dimension. This concept is central to his theory of relativity, which combines time with the three spatial dimensions to create a unified spacetime framework.
The fourth dimension.
Why is time called the fourth dimension?
the fourth dimension is the theory of time ,soul and consionces
Most physicists would tell you that we already consider there to be a fourth dimension. It is time.
The fourth dimension is usually considered as being time.
It all depends what you mean by dimensions - for example in geometry a point is said to have zero dimension a figure having length, such as a line has one dimension a plane or surface has two dimensions a figure having volume has three dimensions the fourth dimension is said to be time any other dimension can not be represented visually but may be dealt with mathematically
the fourth elements or the fourth dimension in the relativity is time. The space are the first three dimensions.
Yes. The 4th dimension is time. According to String Theory (which is unverified), there may be as many as 11 dimensions, but dimensions above the fourth are hypothetical.
It moves in Time, the fourth dimension.
In physics and mathematics, the fourth dimension is commonly referred to as time. It provides a way to describe events in a sequence and how they change over time, along with the three spatial dimensions (length, width, height). This concept is a fundamental part of spacetime in theories like relativity.
eIt depends on what you mean. The fourth dimension can mean time. It's quite obvious who discovered time... If you mean the fourth spatial dimension, then the reality is that nobody has discovered it. It's rather an abstract mathematical concept. There might be parallel universes that have four (or any other number, for that matter) of dimensions, but that's another story entirely.