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For example, a circle in space is made up of all points equidistant from a common center. If you try to construct that in space-time, you get a hyperbola. This is because the time coordinate doesn't behave like the space coordinates. (In computing distances, it gets subtracted so that any points connected by a path at light speed have zero distance between them.)
JP: I'm not sure what you mean by... QuoteFor example, a circle in space is made up of all points equidistant from a common center. If you try to construct that in space-time, you get a hyperbola. This is because the time coordinate doesn't behave like the space coordinates. (In computing distances, it gets subtracted so that any points connected by a path at light speed have zero distance between them.)Time may be treated 'differently' when calculating speeds, because we measure space against time, but when we measure distances in time we do so just as we measure distances in space; distance is just the displacement between any two points within any dimensional set. I don't quite see where you get a hyperbola, for this needs the distance to change; shouldn't the path be a helix?
Yes, good old Pythagoras, but I don't follow that generalisation. This seems like an odd and unwarranted way to treat time.
Could be wrong though, happened before, and will happen again