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visits member for 1 year, 10 months
seen Apr 3 at 20:40
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Mar
11
awarded  Popular Question
Dec
3
awarded  Caucus
Sep
1
accepted Currents and magnets
Aug
25
awarded  Commentator
Aug
23
accepted Red light on blue object (for graphics software)
Aug
23
accepted How to observe a particle with indefinite position?
Aug
22
asked Currents and magnets
Aug
5
asked Red light on blue object (for graphics software)
Jul
23
asked How to observe a particle with indefinite position?
Jul
11
awarded  Yearling
Jun
27
accepted When does centripetal force cause constant circular motion?
Jun
27
comment When does centripetal force cause constant circular motion?
Oh, I see. Simple enough.
Jun
27
asked When does centripetal force cause constant circular motion?
Feb
4
comment Is time fundamentally different from space?
That is a good argument, and one that I was hoping I would get. But how does the generalized form of that equation look like? Or, at least, how does it look if you introduce another dimension?
Feb
4
revised Is time fundamentally different from space?
edited body
Feb
4
comment Is time fundamentally different from space?
@VineetMenon I rewrote the question.
Feb
4
revised Is time fundamentally different from space?
added 1221 characters in body; edited title
Feb
4
comment Is time fundamentally different from space?
@VineetMenon Could you please post an answer explaining why time is fundamentally different from other dimensions? My current understanding (as a non-physicist) is that "spatial" and "temporal" dimensions are the same things, but they have different names because we experience them differently. I guess you could say that the distinction is that movement is restricted in the fourth dimension, but do we know that to be a characteristic of the dimension, or is it a limitation of our technology?
Feb
4
comment Is time fundamentally different from space?
I did not know there was a Theoretical Physics board here on SE. If you think this question is better suited there, please move it. theoreticalphysics.stackexchange.com
Feb
4
comment Is time fundamentally different from space?
+1 "Flatland" seems very interesting. Thanks for pointing it out.