Hidden Dimensions introduction

What is a hidden dimension?

A hidden dimension is an extra spatial dimension beyond the three we normally perceive (length, width, height) that exists in certain physical theories but is not directly visible or accessible in everyday life.

We went through the hidden dimensions in the previous page. Now we are going to dive into theories that need extra dimensions and how these dimensions are used to prove theories:

1. Kaluza-Klein Theory (1920s)

Names:

2. Superstring Theory (1980s)

Look/Description and names:

If you are wondering about the names of the hidden dimensions. I have to tell you that they don't have names because of complexity. They’re labelled mathematically by coordinates on the compact space.

5–10 (hidden):

These are the six compact directions that form a Calabi–Yau manifold.

3. M-Theory (1990s)

Description/names:

5–11 (hidden): Seven compact spatial directions forming a 7-dimensional manifold.

These extra dimensions are needed for the theories to make sense and be mathematically possible

The image below shows what M-Theory is made of. It consists of other theories that combine and unite. These united theories help us understand the world as one.

M-Theory description Superstring theory

This is the Kaluza-Klein Theory.

 Kaluza-Klein Theory

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