Revision 3935447 of "Spacetime" on simplewiki{{mergefrom|Space-time continuum}}
[[File:GPB circling earth.jpg|thumb|300px|An illustration of the space-time curvature caused by Earth.]]
'''Spacetime''' is a model in [[physics]] that joins the three [[dimension]]al space and one dimensional [[time]] into the idea of [[space-time continuum]]. Combining these two ideas helped [[physicist]]s to make many laws of physics easier to understand, and to explain how the universe works on the big level (e.g., [[star]]s) and small level (e.g., [[atom]]s).
The actual number of [[dimension]]s in spacetime is not fixed, but usually spacetime means a four dimensional (three dimensions of space and one dimension of time) spacetime. Some other theories claim that there are more than four dimensions.
== Historical origin ==
Many people link spacetime with [[Albert Einstein]] who found [[special relativity]]. However, it was Einstein's teacher, [[Hermann Minkowski]], who suggested this idea. He hoped this new idea would clarify the theory of special relativity. It was Einstein, though, who discovered the curvature of spacetime (gravity) in [[general relativity]].
==Spacetime in Special Relativity==
[[File:World line.svg|Thumb|right]]
The idea of spacetime originated from the concept of ''Minkowski spacetime''. Minkowski spacetime is a 4-dimensional [[manifold]] that is the arena of every event in the universe. To the right, a 3-dimensional analogy of 4-dimensional Minkowski spacetime is given. Time is taken to be the vertical axis, and the two spacial dimensions are the forward-backwards and left-right axes. In reality, there are four dimensions, but this concept is virtually impossible to visualize.
Minkowski spacetime is only accurate at describing [[constant velocity]]; this means the velocity cannot change at any period in time (acceleration is dealt with in general relativity). Minkowski spacetime also allows for visualizations of the [[Lorentz transformations]], [[time dilation]], and [[Lorentz contraction]] without the algebraic equations.
==Spacetime in general Relativity==
In general relativity, Einstein generalized Minkowski spacetime to include the effects of [[acceleration]]. Einstein discovered that the curvature in his 4-dimensional spacetime representation was actually the cause of [[gravity]]. If you graph accelerated motion on a typical x-and-time coordinate system, you will end up with some form of curve; never a straight line. Einstein felt that this was a deep connection between the nature of spacetime and acceleration. Via his [[equivalence principle]], he showed that a curve in generalized spacetime would result in the effects of gravity.
== Spacetime in quantum mechanics and disagreements ==
In [[general relativity]], spacetime is thought as smooth and continuous. However in the theory of [[quantum mechanics]], spacetime is not always continuous.
[[Category:Physics]]
<!--
[[rq:Пространство-время]]
Article does not yet exist in this language.
-->
[[ar:زمكان]]
[[bn:স্থান-কাল]]
[[bg:Пространство-време]]
[[bs:Prostorvrijeme]]
[[ca:Espai-temps]]
[[cs:Časoprostor]]
[[da:Rumtid]]
[[de:Raumzeit]]
[[el:Χωροχρόνος]]
[[en:Spacetime]]
[[es:Espacio-tiempo]]
[[eo:Spactempo]]
[[fa:فضازمان]]
[[fr:Espace-temps]]
[[gl:Espazo-tempo]]
[[ko:시공간]]
[[hi:दिक्-काल]]
[[hr:Prostorvrijeme]]
[[is:Tímarúm]]
[[it:Spaziotempo]]
[[he:מרחב-זמן]]
[[la:Continuum spatio-temporale]]
[[lv:Laiktelpa]]
[[lt:Erdvėlaikis]]
[[hu:Téridő]]
[[ml:സ്ഥലകാലം]]
[[mr:काल-अवकाश]]
[[arz:سبيس-تايم]]
[[ms:Ruang-masa]]
[[nl:Ruimtetijd]]
[[ja:時空]]
[[no:Romtid]]
[[nn:Romtid]]
[[pl:Czasoprzestrzeń]]
[[pt:Espaço-tempo]]
[[ro:Spațiu-timp]]
[[qu:Pacha]]
[[ru:Пространство-время]]
[[sq:Hapësirë-koha]]
[[sk:Priestoročas]]
[[sl:Prostor-čas]]
[[ckb:کاتجێ]]
[[sr:Простор-време]]
[[sh:Prostor-vreme]]
[[fi:Aika-avaruus]]
[[sv:Rumtid]]
[[ta:வெளிநேரம்]]
[[tr:Uzayzaman]]
[[uk:Простір-час]]
[[ur:زمان و مکاں]]
[[vi:Không-thời gian]]
[[war:Kalarakan-oras]]
[[zh:时空]]All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=3935447.
![]() ![]() This site is not affiliated with or endorsed in any way by the Wikimedia Foundation or any of its affiliates. In fact, we fucking despise them.
|