That simply means that you can have three straight lines, such that each of them is at right angles to all the others.You can choose one that goes from north to south, one that goes from east to west, and one that goes from up to down. Or any other three lines at right angles to one another - for example, another option is 1) north-east to south-west; 2) north-west to south-east; 3) up to down.
the dimensions of the first space shuttle were what ever the dimensions of them are how every were made so if you have a problem with it deal with it
Space is three dimensional, the three dimensions being length, width, and height. It is possible therefore to describe a motion in space in terms of a three dimensional coordinate system. However, motion also involves time, so you might want to consider a four dimensional system. That enables you to determine not only where something went, but also when, and how rapidly it went there.
There are three visible spatial dimensions. Time is often also considered a dimension. Some forms of string theory postulate an 11 dimensional space.
Its an acronym, stands for: Time And Relative Dimensions In Space.
It is the T.A.R.D.I.S. Time and Relative Dimensions in Space.
No. Space is a set of three dimensions in which things can exist.
It is a geometric model of the physical universe . The three dimensions are length, width, and depth or height
Time is one dimension, not four. If you combine it with space, you can "visualize" it as four dimensions: three dimensions of space, one of time. Sort of visualize it - we can't really visualize four dimensions.
Space is the enormous volume in which matter and energy are located and through which motion takes place. Space is observed to have three dimensions, which are length, width, and depth (or height). It is hypothesized that there may be more dimensions than the three that we observe in our daily lives. String theory gives space ten dimensions and M-theory gives it as many as eleven dimensions including that of time.
There are (so far) three dimensions of space, and one dimension of time.
The four dimensions of Space Time are one real dimension r=ct and three vector dimensions Ix + Jy + Kz. All the dimensions have units of meters. The idea of a dimension of time is an historical artifact.
Length Width Height
I assume you mean, "what quantity describes the how much something is extended in three-dimensional space?", in which case the answer is volume.
No. Everything in our world is four dimensions. 3 dimensions of space, and 1 dimension of time.
In any of the three spacial dimensions or a combination of same
Space has 3 million dimensions
In two dimensional space they must. In three (or more) dimensions they need not.