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  2. Four-dimensional space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-dimensional_space

    Four-dimensional space (4D) is the mathematical extension of the concept of three-dimensional space (3D). Three-dimensional space is the simplest possible abstraction of the observation that one needs only three numbers, called dimensions, to describe the sizes or locations of objects in the everyday world.

  3. Spacetime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacetime

    In four-dimensional spacetime, the analog to distance is the interval. Although time comes in as a fourth dimension, it is treated differently than the spatial dimensions. Minkowski space hence differs in important respects from four-dimensional Euclidean space .

  4. Minkowski space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minkowski_space

    In his second relativity paper in 1905, Henri Poincaré showed [4] how, by taking time to be an imaginary fourth spacetime coordinate ict, where c is the speed of light and i is the imaginary unit, Lorentz transformations can be visualized as ordinary rotations of the four-dimensional Euclidean sphere. The four-dimensional spacetime can be ...

  5. Physicist Reveals What the Fourth Dimension Looks Like - AOL

    www.aol.com/physicist-reveals-fourth-dimension...

    Greene offers up a garden hose as a good example of what the fourth dimension looks like. From far away, this garden hose may look one-dimensional to the naked eye. From a distance, we simply can ...

  6. Fourth dimension in art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_dimension_in_art

    In the piece, Weber states, [7] "In plastic art, I believe, there is a fourth dimension which may be described as the consciousness of a great and overwhelming sense of space-magnitude in all directions at one time, and is brought into existence through the three known measurements." Another influence on the School of Paris was that of Jean ...

  7. Tesseract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesseract

    It is the four-dimensional measure polytope, taken as a unit for hypervolume. [2] Coxeter labels it the γ 4 polytope. [3] The term hypercube without a dimension reference is frequently treated as a synonym for this specific polytope. The Oxford English Dictionary traces the word tesseract to Charles Howard Hinton's 1888 book A New Era of Thought.

  8. Four-dimensionalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-dimensionalism

    Four-dimensionalism is a name for different positions. One of these uses four-dimensionalism as a position of material objects with respect to dimensions. Four-dimensionalism is the view that in addition to spatial parts, objects have temporal parts. [7] According to this view, four-dimensionalism cannot be used as a synonym for perdurantism.

  9. Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotations_in_4-dimensional...

    Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space. In mathematics, the group of rotations about a fixed point in four-dimensional Euclidean space is denoted SO (4). The name comes from the fact that it is the special orthogonal group of order 4. In this article rotation means rotational displacement. For the sake of uniqueness, rotation angles are ...