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Passionflower
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Interesting discussion, it seems a lot of the argument has to do with terminology and perhaps an understanding of the matter. I will try to summarize in order to organize my own thoughts about it, and hopefully do not instead add more confusion.
If I understand JDoolin's view correctly he considers the 'real' distance being the cord length, e.g. the length of the cord if we span this cord using an embedding dimension, between two points (we assume we slice time and space in a 'sensible' way):
That is certainly a point of view but is there any physics associated with it? According to GR it seems not, assuming this is right then my question to JDoolin is what is the point in calling this the "real distance"?JDoolin said:Certainly, if someone told me the distance between two cities, I would expect them to be talking about the distance along a particular road or set of roads. But where are you taking this? The real distance between the two points is the one connecting the two cities right through the surface of the planet.
I think the main argument to call a space curved (again assuming a 'sensible' slicing of time and space) is that it is not physically possible to travel on the 'cord distance'.
Let's for instance take an example using the Schwarzschild solution:
Suppose we have 8 space stations forming the vertices of a cube around a planet. All stations keep a fixed distance D from the surface of a planet. Then if they start sending out light signals to each other, or when small space crafts travel from one to another all will have to conclude that the space around this planet is not Euclidean. One could argue and say, 'well they did not travel on the cord distance', however this seems a moot point as such traveling is not physically possible.
I agree that the surface of the Earth is a 2-dimensional manifold however I disagree that space is Euclidean.PeterDonis said:The reason we can make this distinction, though, is that we know the Earth's surface is a 2-dimensional manifold that is embedded in a 3-dimensional space that is (as far as we can tell) Euclidean
As far as I understand one can always embed a given manifold in higher dimensions, whether that makes sense is a different question. How do you conclude there is no guarantee?PeterDonis said:However, there is no guarantee that we will always be able to find a higher-dimensional Euclidean space in which a given manifold is embedded.
As I said before we already know space is not Euclidean.PeterDonis said:For example, it is possible (though not likely, given the current state of evidence) that the 3-dimensional manifold that we call "space" is actually not Euclidean
For instance in the Schwarzschild solution, which is one of the simplest solutions, we could 'push' all the curvature into the 'time' dimension. For instance consider the GP coordinate chart. But this 'pushing' only works for the Schwarzschild solution, generally it is impossible to do so.
Generally when there is mass-energy spacetime will be curved and if this mass-energy is distributed we cannot push all this curvature into the 'time' dimension only.
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