- #1
kfielder
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Hello, I’m not a physicist or studying physics in school; I’ve just read some books and have some questions that I was hoping someone could help with. Sorry if they’re a little basic.
I’m trying to understand how tightly coupled matter is to spacetime. In other words, if you could look at a single point in space across time, would you see all of the places where matter passes through that intersection of space and time as a static event?
Some of what I’ve read seems to indicate that, but I’m not sure how that works with the relativistic nature of space and time individually since events don’t happen at the same intersection for all observers. Basically, if I had a bird's eye view of all four dimensions of our universe, what would I see?
I’m trying to understand how tightly coupled matter is to spacetime. In other words, if you could look at a single point in space across time, would you see all of the places where matter passes through that intersection of space and time as a static event?
Some of what I’ve read seems to indicate that, but I’m not sure how that works with the relativistic nature of space and time individually since events don’t happen at the same intersection for all observers. Basically, if I had a bird's eye view of all four dimensions of our universe, what would I see?
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