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Relativity and the dimensionality of the world

All physicists would agree that one of the most fundamental problems of the 21st century physics is the dimensionality of the world. In the four-dimensional world of Minkowski (or Minkowski spacetime) the most challenging problem is the nature of the temporal dimension. In Minkowski spacetime it is...

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Autor principal: Petkov, Vesselin
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6318-3
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1251554
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author Petkov, Vesselin
author_facet Petkov, Vesselin
author_sort Petkov, Vesselin
collection CERN
description All physicists would agree that one of the most fundamental problems of the 21st century physics is the dimensionality of the world. In the four-dimensional world of Minkowski (or Minkowski spacetime) the most challenging problem is the nature of the temporal dimension. In Minkowski spacetime it is merely one of the four dimensions, which means that it is entirely given like the other three spacial dimensions. If the temporal dimension were not given in its entirety and only one constantly changing moment of it existed, Minkowski spacetime would be reduced to the ordinary three-dimensional space. But if the physical world, represented by Minkowski spacetime, is indeed four-dimensional with time being the fourth dimension, then such a world is drastically different from its image based on our perceptions. Minkowski four-dimensional world is a block Universe, a frozen world in which nothing happens since all moments of time are given ‘at once', which means that physical bodies are four-dimensional worldtubes containing the whole histories in time of the three-dimensional bodies of our everyday experience. The implications of a real Minkowski world for physics itself and especially for our world view are enormous. The main focus of this volume is the question: is spacetime nothing more than a mathematical space (which describes the evolution in time of the ordinary three-dimensional world) or is it a mathematical model of a real four-dimensional world with time entirely given as the fourth dimension? It contains fourteen invited papers which either directly address the main question of the nature of spacetime or explore issues related to it. Audience Physicists and philosophers
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spelling cern-12515542021-04-22T01:26:25Zdoi:10.1007/978-1-4020-6318-3http://cds.cern.ch/record/1251554engPetkov, VesselinRelativity and the dimensionality of the worldGeneral Theoretical PhysicsAll physicists would agree that one of the most fundamental problems of the 21st century physics is the dimensionality of the world. In the four-dimensional world of Minkowski (or Minkowski spacetime) the most challenging problem is the nature of the temporal dimension. In Minkowski spacetime it is merely one of the four dimensions, which means that it is entirely given like the other three spacial dimensions. If the temporal dimension were not given in its entirety and only one constantly changing moment of it existed, Minkowski spacetime would be reduced to the ordinary three-dimensional space. But if the physical world, represented by Minkowski spacetime, is indeed four-dimensional with time being the fourth dimension, then such a world is drastically different from its image based on our perceptions. Minkowski four-dimensional world is a block Universe, a frozen world in which nothing happens since all moments of time are given ‘at once', which means that physical bodies are four-dimensional worldtubes containing the whole histories in time of the three-dimensional bodies of our everyday experience. The implications of a real Minkowski world for physics itself and especially for our world view are enormous. The main focus of this volume is the question: is spacetime nothing more than a mathematical space (which describes the evolution in time of the ordinary three-dimensional world) or is it a mathematical model of a real four-dimensional world with time entirely given as the fourth dimension? It contains fourteen invited papers which either directly address the main question of the nature of spacetime or explore issues related to it. Audience Physicists and philosophersSpringeroai:cds.cern.ch:12515542007
spellingShingle General Theoretical Physics
Petkov, Vesselin
Relativity and the dimensionality of the world
title Relativity and the dimensionality of the world
title_full Relativity and the dimensionality of the world
title_fullStr Relativity and the dimensionality of the world
title_full_unstemmed Relativity and the dimensionality of the world
title_short Relativity and the dimensionality of the world
title_sort relativity and the dimensionality of the world
topic General Theoretical Physics
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6318-3
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1251554
work_keys_str_mv AT petkovvesselin relativityandthedimensionalityoftheworld