- #1
derekmohammed
- 105
- 0
This is my first post here and I am not quite sure if this is the right place to put this post but here it goes anyway...
It is said that space only exists in the presence of matter. IF this is true what would happen in the following situation...
Let us say we have a box with incredibly large dimensions and infinitely strong sides. Inside this box there is a perfectly uniform vacuum, in which there are no atoms or any other particles are inside the box. Is it possible to say that since there is no matter inside the enormous box that there is no space inside the box? (Not sure if there would be "no Space" in the middle area or uniformly throughout?) And if there is space could we consider those units to be the standard units of space, if there is such thing?
And Finally... If we were to run an electric current through the box would electrons and positrons appear? IF so were do they come from?
Thanks Alot.
Derek Mohammed
It is said that space only exists in the presence of matter. IF this is true what would happen in the following situation...
Let us say we have a box with incredibly large dimensions and infinitely strong sides. Inside this box there is a perfectly uniform vacuum, in which there are no atoms or any other particles are inside the box. Is it possible to say that since there is no matter inside the enormous box that there is no space inside the box? (Not sure if there would be "no Space" in the middle area or uniformly throughout?) And if there is space could we consider those units to be the standard units of space, if there is such thing?
And Finally... If we were to run an electric current through the box would electrons and positrons appear? IF so were do they come from?
Thanks Alot.
Derek Mohammed