From: Hara Ra (harara@shamanics.com)
Date: Fri Jan 16 1998 - 15:40:28 MST
> Anton wrote
> : The Cartesian product of a line (d=1) and a line (d=1) is a plane (d=2).
> : The Cartesian product of a line (d=1) and a point (d=0) is a line (d=1).
In a continuious manifold, the dimensionality is the number of real
numbers required to uniquely define a point therin. A line needs 1
number, a plane 2 numbers, etc. For flat eculidian space this is easily
used to calculate a lot of other things, for example, distance = sqrt
(x*x + y*y + ....). It gets harder for noneuclidian spaces - for example
the surface of a torus.
Though it is possible to map all the points on a plane to a line, and
all points in a 3 space to a plane and therefore to a line, such
mappings violate continuity, which requires that a small displacement of
the point result in a small change in the real number tuplet which
defines the location of the point.
O----------------------------------O
| Hara Ra <harara@shamanics.com> |
| Box 8334 Santa Cruz, CA 95061 |
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