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But I thought that there can only be one time axis.
I guess for now I have to figure out how it is logically possible for one dimension to have multiple axis.
I thought that we would not be able to do that because the time dimension t is indeed different than the spatial dimension x. In that sense saying that something is only moving along the time axis or not would seem to actually make an objective difference.
Newton is generally credited as the first to use the term "spacetime".
How long did you take to come up with that?
Quote from: HalcYou have a reference for that?I occasionally listen to Sean Carrol's Mindscape podcast, and he uses a line something like this in his monthly "Ask Me Anything" (AMA) episodes when people ask about the wave function of the universe, or whether the universe is infinite or finite. Such questions have popped up several times.- As I understand it, in QM, the state space of wave functions exist in Hilbert Space - Hilbert space may have an infinite or finite number of dimensions.- Nobody knows whether the universe is infinite or finite, but Hilbert space can represent both- The extremely large number that I vaguely recall for a finite dimensional Hilbert Space might represent the number of states in our observable universe (making no claims about the number of states in the non-observable universe).
You have a reference for that?
[String theory] also has a rather thorny stumbling block known as the landscape problem, where literally zillions of universes (around 10500, the number is so large that it seems obscene) are acceptable solutions of the theory. If string theory is correct one can declare victory as one of those zillions of universes must be our universe, and all one needs to do is to somehow find that particular solution to figure out what the laws of physics are for us. Of course, this is an impossible task because of the exceptionally large number of possible universes existing in the landscape, and all with their own distinct laws.This scenario is often called the multiverse. All possible laws, conceivable and inconceivable, are allowed in some possible universe, and laws of physics are no longer meaningful or unique from a fundamental sense, since they depend entirely on where in the multiverse landscape one is looking. It is ironic that the theory of everything turned out to imply an everything which is exponentially larger than any everything anybody could have imagined before.
The OP did not ask about entropy, either.
But I do know that those diagrams are not a proper geometric model of what is actually happening in the Minkowski space.
The time dimension is like that. You pick two events (points in spacetime). You say 'this' event and clack two rocks together to define the event. Then you wander off some arbitrary place and clack the same two rocks a 2nd time to define a second event. The one unique line through spacetime connecting those two events is now defined. You've chosen a totally arbitrary orientation for your time dimension since the two events you chose are completely arbitrary.
Some of the formating of quotes has gone wrong in your last post.
Now, I did mention in a post some time that it was "more or less" correct.
More generally, the two events with the rock clacking can't be completely arbitrarily chosen, the first one is arbitrary. The second one must be timelike separated.
Then you wander off some arbitrary place and clack the same two rocks a 2nd time to define a second event.
Also, Roxy is only metaphorically allowed to "wander off" to the other rock clacking event. Since that event must be timelike separated from the other one, she has to run faster than anything else in her world.
Quote from: Dimensional on 11/12/2022 04:35:57But I thought that there can only be one time axis.QuoteI guess for now I have to figure out how it is logically possible for one dimension to have multiple axis.There can be only one time axis, just like there's just one x axis. But which way you decide to point it is arbitrary, again just like the x axis. The simple picture ES drew shows more than one way to orient it, but each frame defines only one time axis. There cannot be a second time axis in any given coordinate system.
QuoteI thought that we would not be able to do that because the time dimension t is indeed different than the spatial dimension x. In that sense saying that something is only moving along the time axis or not would seem to actually make an objective difference.The two are different since it is possible for a rock's worldline to correspond to the time axis if it is stationary in some coordinate system, and it is also at the origin of that coordinate system. The rock's worldline however cannot correspond to the x axis because that would require it to be at multiple locations simultaneously.
Quote from: Dimensional on 11/12/2022 20:26:59But I do know that those diagrams are not a proper geometric model of what is actually happening in the Minkowski space.Those diagrams are an exact model actually, just as much as a map of Paris is a valid (not wrong) representation of actual Paris.
But there are two time axis in the diagram.
In my mind there is a special and absolute time axis because it is different than the spatial axis
Even though the diagram is legitimate, we cannot actually draw timelike intervals.
Quote from: Dimensional on 12/12/2022 06:59:03But there are two time axis in the diagram.That is because the diagram is showing the time axis from 2 different frames.
There is no absolute time. In your frame 1 second is 1 second, in every other frame 1 second in their frame will be less than 1 second when compared to your frame. That is why t' is tilted relative to t in the diagram.
Quote from: Dimensional on 12/12/2022 06:59:03Even though the diagram is legitimate, we cannot actually draw timelike intervals.Why not?
Yes, but there are still two time axis in different locations.
Why should we have to illustrate the axis in two different locations if there weren't two different time axis.
Is it possible to show both frames using one time axis?
Yes, I agree that there is no absolute time, but I am saying that I am confused as to how we can have two different time axis.
Quote from: Dimensional on 12/12/2022 17:11:55Yes, but there are still two time axis in different locations. Correct.Quote from: Dimensional on 12/12/2022 17:11:55Why should we have to illustrate the axis in two different locations if there weren't two different time axis.There are 2 different time axes because the single diagram is showing time for 2 different frames.Quote from: Dimensional on 12/12/2022 17:11:55Is it possible to show both frames using one time axis?Not that I am aware of.Quote from: Dimensional on 12/12/2022 17:11:55Yes, I agree that there is no absolute time, but I am saying that I am confused as to how we can have two different time axis.What confuses you? Since there are 2 different inertial frames we know that time moves at a different rates for the different frames so they both couldn't possibly have the same time axis.
Hi. I'm at risk of just repeating something that was already mentioned but I think it's important to do so:You ( @Dimensional ) seem to be thinking that there is an extra dimension of time, so there's 5 dimensions, 3 of space plus 2 of time.
However it is possible to draw the time axis of a completely different reference frame on the same spacetime diagram if you want to. That extra time axis (e.g. the blue one on my diagram) is NOT used as a time axis in the black frame. In the black frame the only time axis that is used is the black one. We can just draw the other time axis for the other reference frame on that same diagram because it's often helpful to do so.Does that make sense?
Right now I am stuck thinking that there has to be more than one direction of time as multiple axis would seem to suggest this.
Hi.Quote from: Dimensional on 13/12/2022 23:13:55Right now I am stuck thinking that there has to be more than one direction of time as multiple axis would seem to suggest this. I expect most of us would prefer to say "orientation" of the time axis instead of direction - but overall this is right. You have stated something that is true and really is a very important consequence of special relativity, well done. Special relativity does suggest that the time axis can have all sorts of orientations. It depends on the motion of the reference frame you have chosen to use. So there honestly isn't one universal time axis for everything, everyone and every valid reference frame. Since there is no "absolute" or most truthful reference frame, they are all as good and as valid as any other, I can't tell you how your time axis is orientated right now. It is some way. We might just as well call that "straight up" and start drawing our spacetime diagram on an ordinary flat Euclidean space (a piece of paper) like we did in an earlier post. Just to make this clear: The black axis was shown in the usual way, with the black time axis straight up and the black x-axis running horizontally across the page but we would have an equally valid diagram if we had decided the blue axis was arranged that way (the blue time axis went straight up and the blue x-axis - which I never really put on the diagram anyway - running across the page). The only thing I can tell you is how the time axis that someone else is using will compare to your time axis. Specifically, if you tell me the offset velocity (how their frame is moving relative to yours) then I can tell you how their time axis is orientated compared to yours. That is all we can do. There is no objective way that I can determine the absolute orientation of your time axis right now. Intuitively, you will probably understand what I'm trying to say with terms like an "absolute orientation".... this is because we are human and our ideas are manifestly those of Euclidean geometry anyway. To phrase it more mathematically we have something like this: If an ordinary Euclidean (and not Minkowski) metric was applied to spacetime, then the chances of your time axis being Euclidean-orthogonal to the x-axis (i.e. really running straight up) is low. It will be sloping somehow. There should be only one inertial reference frame (up to translations and spatial rotations) where the time axis would really be Euclidean-orthogonal to the x-axis but we have no way of finding or identifying that reference frame. In any valid inertial reference frame, the laws of physics do hold, there is nothing special or obvious that would happen if, by chance, the time axis really was Euclidean-orthogonal to the x-axis. I hope that's helping a bit. The orientation of the time axis is not pre-ordained or taken as some fact. We have no idea if we are using the one where it would be Euclidean-orthogonal to the x-axis. We are just using a time axis which is Minkowski-orthogonal to the x-axis. Any reference frame where the space and time axis are Minkowsi-orthogonal is just as good as any other. Best Wishes.