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The possibility of dimensions of space beyond the three that we know about is an idea that
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it cropped up in the early part of the twentieth century and it has been with us ever since.
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Even our modern approach to unified theory, something called string theory, evokes the
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possibility of more dimensions than the three that we experience, right. So we all know
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about left-right, back-forth and up-down, right. Those are the three dimensions that
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are all around us. We all move through them freely in day to day life. These other dimensions
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suggested by theoretical considerations. There is no experimental evidence for any of what
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I’m about to tell you. But the theoretical considerations suggest that in addition to
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left-right, back-forth and up-down there may be other spatial dimensions. It’s hard to
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picture like where could they be? There doesn’t seem to be any room left and that’s really
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the point. They are new places that our experience doesn’t allow us to access directly but
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according to this theoretical ideas might be there.
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I have a little analogy that helps to understand this. Think of a garden hose is one that we
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love to use. So think about a garden hose that’s nice and long. Now from far away
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the garden hose is going to look one dimensional because that’s the only part that you have
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the visual acuity to see because the circular part is just too small for your feeble eyes
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to detect. But then if you take a pair of binoculars from a faraway vantage point now
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you see that there is a circular dimension, a circular part that wraps around the garden
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hose that you missed when you just used your feeble senses. So dimensions can be big, obvious
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and easy to see or they can be curled up and tiny, much more difficult to detect. Now the
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garden hose is an object in our universe. But this idea might apply to space itself,
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right. So it could be that left-right, back-forth and up-down are the big easy to see dimensions
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like the horizontal extent of the garden hose. But just as the hose has a curled up dimension,
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maybe space itself has curled up dimensions all around us, just curled up to such a fantastically
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small size that we can’t see them with our eyes. We can’t see them even with today’s
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most powerful microscopes. But the possibility according to the mathematics well motivated
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by these attempts of realizing Einstein’s dream of unified theory, the math suggests
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this as a real possibility that there may be more dimensions than the ones that we directly
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experience.