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Modern physics is built upon a set of dimensional assumptions that are rarely stated explicitly, yet underpin every formalism in use. The universe is taken to possess a fixed number of dimensions—typically three of space and one of time—extended in some frameworks to higher-dimensional manifolds such as those proposed in string theory or compactified geometries in advanced quantum gravity models.
By Mark HgginsModern physics is built upon a set of dimensional assumptions that are rarely stated explicitly, yet underpin every formalism in use. The universe is taken to possess a fixed number of dimensions—typically three of space and one of time—extended in some frameworks to higher-dimensional manifolds such as those proposed in string theory or compactified geometries in advanced quantum gravity models.