2017-12-30 at 5:22 PM UTC
Obbe
Alan What?
[annoy my right-angled speediness]
What is space-time? What is it made of? How and why does gravity affect it? Where does space-time come from? Where does gravity come from?
2017-12-30 at 5:26 PM UTC
The kid in my avatar is thinking those very questions. They're tough ones. Its just so fun to wonder!
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2017-12-30 at 5:48 PM UTC
They are dimensions consisting of arrangements of atomic elements in quantum form, matter, EM wave energies and subatomic particles.
2017-12-30 at 9:59 PM UTC
yea yea trippy third eye chakraz n shit UNIVERSAAAALLLLLL
we are all one. quantum mechanics + soul + physics = ETERNAL LOVE everybody is god nobody exists everyone is a lotus blossom
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AngryOnion
Big Wig
[the nightly self-effacing broadsheet]
And like we can talk about it.
2018-01-20 at 12:03 AM UTC
Space-time is a mathematical model used in the explanation of a relativistic universe. I don’t think it’s “made of” anything. It’s more like a system of rules/properties that everything of substance exists within the framework of. Think of space-time as a four-dimensional plane or graph, and matter as data points on that plane.
I think
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2018-01-20 at 3:08 AM UTC
Fox Paws is pretty close. I guess technically everything is some kind of abstraction of some rules that are used to explain the behaviour of certain phenomena in the universe. We use the term "space-time" in the same sense. It's no less a thing than any other material or substance, in that sense. It's just a different level of abstraction.
More to the point, we don't really have a good explanation for space-time i.e. on a quantum level, we haven't discovered a reason for why things act the way they do on the classical scale that would explain relativistic effects or gravity. It's possible our basic metriculation of physics is fundamentally flawed.