I deleted the "Basic concepts" section. Being a pack rat, I am parking the deleted material here to see what I can salvage.
I regenerated an anchor to "Spacetime intervals" as an alternative anchor to "Spacetime interval" in the introduction.
Stigmatella aurantiaca (talk) 09:53, 11 April 2017 (UTC)
==Basic concepts==
The basic elements of spacetime are events. In any given spacetime, an event is a unique position at a unique time. Because events are spacetime points, an example of an event in classical relativistic physics is <math>(x,y,z,t)</math>, the location of an elementary (point-like) particle at a particular time. A spacetime itself can be viewed as the union of all events in the same way that a line is the union of all of its points, formally organized into a [[manifold]], a space which can be described at small scales using coordinate systems.
Spacetime is independent of any [[Observer (special relativity)|observer]].<ref>{{cite book| last = Matolcsi| first = Tamás| title = Spacetime Without Reference Frames| publisher = Akadémiai Kiadó| year= 1994| location = Budapest}}</ref> However, in describing physical phenomena (which occur at certain moments of time in a given region of space), each observer chooses a convenient metrical [[coordinate system]]. Events are specified by four [[real numbers]] in any such coordinate system. The trajectories of elementary (point-like) particles through space and time are thus a continuum of events called the [[world line]] of the particle. Extended or composite objects (consisting of many elementary particles) are thus a union of many world lines twisted together by virtue of their interactions through spacetime into a "world-braid".
However, in physics, it is common to treat an extended object as a "particle" or "field" with its own unique (e.g., center of mass) position at any given time, so that the world line of a particle or light beam is the path that this particle or beam takes in the spacetime and represents the history of the particle or beam. The world line of the orbit of the Earth (in such a description) is depicted in two spatial dimensions ''x'' and ''y'' (the plane of the Earth's orbit) and a time dimension orthogonal to ''x'' and ''y''. The orbit of the Earth is an [[ellipse]] in space alone, but its world line is a [[helix]] in spacetime.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Ellis|first1=George F.R.|last2=Williams|first2=Ruth M.|last3=Carfora|first3=Mauro|title=Flat and Curved Space-times|date=2000|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|isbn=0198506570|edition=2nd|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LKfvAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=30 January 2017}}</ref>
The unification of space and time is exemplified by the common practice of selecting a metric (the measure that specifies the [[Interval (mathematics)|interval]] between two events in spacetime) such that all four dimensions are measured in terms of [[Units of measurement|units]] of distance: representing an event as <math>(x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3) = (ct,x,y,z)</math> (in the Lorentz metric) or <math>(x_1,x_2,x_3,x_4) = (x,y,z,ict)</math> (in the original Minkowski metric) where <math>c</math> is the [[speed of light]].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Petkov|first1=Vesselin|title=Minkowski Spacetime: A Hundred Years Later|date=2010|publisher=Springer|location=Dordrecht, Netherlands|isbn=9048134749|page=70|url=https://books.google.com/?id=trlsrl4mF3YC|accessdate=30 January 2017}}</ref> The metrical descriptions of [[Minkowski Space]] and spacelike, lightlike, and timelike intervals given below follow this convention, as do the conventional formulations of the [[Lorentz transformation]].
==={{vanchor|Spacetime intervals}} in flat space===
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In a [[Euclidean space]], the separation between two points is measured by the distance between the two points. The distance is purely spatial, and is always positive. In spacetime, the [[4-position#Four-position|displacement four-vector]] Δ''R'' is given by the space [[displacement vector]] Δ''r'' and the time difference Δ''t'' between the events. The ''spacetime interval'', also called ''invariant interval'', between the two events, ''s''<sup>2</sup>,<ref group=note>Note that the term ''spacetime interval'' is applied by several authors to the quantity ''s''<sup>2</sup> and not to ''s''. The reason that the quantity ''s''<sup>2</sup> is used and not ''s'' is that ''s''<sup>2</sup> can be positive, zero or negative, and is a more generally convenient and useful quantity than the Minkowski norm with a timelike/null/spacelike distinguisher: the pair ({{sqrt|{{abs|''s''<sup>2</sup>}}}}, sgn(''s''<sup>2</sup>)). Despite the notation, it should not be regarded as the square of a number, but as a symbol. The cost for this convenience is that this "interval" is quadratic in linear separation along a straight line.</ref> is defined as:
:<math>s^2 = \Delta r^2 - c^2\Delta t^2 \,</math> (spacetime interval),
where ''c'' is the speed of light. The choice of signs for <math>s^2</math> above follows the [[Signature convention|space-like convention (−+++)]].<ref group=note>More generally the spacetime interval in flat space can be written as <math> s^2= g_{\alpha\beta}\Delta x^\alpha \Delta x^\beta </math> with [[metric tensor]] ''g'' independent of spacetime position.</ref>
Spacetime intervals may be classified into three distinct types, based on whether the temporal separation (<math>c^2 \Delta t^2</math>) is greater than, equal to, or smaller than the spatial separation (<math>\Delta r^2</math>), corresponding to time-like, light-like, or space-like separated intervals, respectively.
Certain types of [[world line]]s are called [[geodesic]]s of the spacetime – straight lines in the case of Minkowski space and their closest equivalent in the curved spacetime of general relativity. In the case of purely time-like paths, geodesics are (locally) the paths of greatest separation (spacetime interval) as measured along the path between two events, whereas in Euclidean space and Riemannian manifolds, geodesics are paths of shortest distance between two points.<ref group=note>This characterization is not universal: both the arcs between two points of a [[great circle]] on a sphere are geodesics.</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Berry|first1=Michael|title=Principles of Cosmology and Gravitation|date=1989|publisher=A. Hilger|location=Bristol, England|isbn=0852740379|page=58|edition=1st|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wTvFxXguod0C|accessdate=30 January 2017}}</ref> The concept of geodesics becomes central in [[general relativity]], since geodesic motion may be thought of as "pure motion" ([[Fictitious force|inertial motion]]) in spacetime, that is, free from any external influences.
====Time-like interval====
:<math>\begin{align} \\
c^2\Delta t^2 &> \Delta r^2\\
s^2 &< 0 \\
\end{align}</math>
For two events separated by a time-like interval, enough time passes between them that there could be a cause–effect relationship between the two events. For a particle traveling through space at less than the speed of light, any two events which occur to or by the particle must be separated by a time-like interval. Event pairs with time-like separation define a negative spacetime interval (<math>s^2 < 0</math>) and may be said to occur in each other's future or past. There exists a [[Frame of reference|reference frame]] such that the two events are observed to occur in the same spatial location, but there is no reference frame in which the two events can occur at the same time.
The measure of a time-like spacetime interval is described by the [[proper time interval]], <math>\Delta\tau</math>:
:<math>\Delta\tau = \sqrt{\Delta t^2 - \frac{\Delta r^2}{c^2}}</math> (proper time interval).
The proper time interval would be measured by an observer with a clock traveling between the two events in an [[inertial]] reference frame, when the observer's path intersects each event as that event occurs. (The proper time interval defines a [[real number]], since the interior of the square root is positive.)
====Light-like interval====
:<math>\begin{align}
c^2\Delta t^2 &= \Delta r^2 \\
s^2 &= 0 \\
\end{align}</math>
In a light-like interval, the spatial distance between two events is exactly balanced by the time between the two events. The events define a spacetime interval of zero (<math>s^2 = 0</math>). Light-like intervals are also known as "null" intervals.
Events which occur to or are initiated by a [[photon]] along its path (i.e., while traveling at <math>c</math>, the speed of light) all have light-like separation. Given one event, all those events which follow at light-like intervals define the propagation of a [[light cone]], and all the events which preceded from a light-like interval define a second (graphically inverted, which is to say "''pastward''") light cone.
====Space-like interval====
:<math>\begin{align} \\
c^2\Delta t^2 &< \Delta r^2 \\
s^2 &> 0 \\
\end{align}</math>
When a space-like interval separates two events, not enough time passes between their occurrences for there to exist a [[causal]] relationship crossing the spatial distance between the two events at the speed of light or slower. Generally, the events are considered not to occur in each other's future or past. There exists a [[Frame of reference|reference frame]] such that the two events are observed to occur at the same time, but there is no reference frame in which the two events can occur in the same spatial location.
For these space-like event pairs with a positive spacetime interval (<math>s^2 > 0</math>), the measurement of space-like separation is the [[proper distance]], <math>\Delta\sigma</math>:
:<math>\Delta\sigma = \sqrt{s^2} = \sqrt{\Delta r^2 - c^2\Delta t^2}</math> (proper distance).
Like the proper time of time-like intervals, the proper distance of space-like spacetime intervals is a real number value.
===Interval as area===
The interval has been presented as the [[area]] of an oriented [[rectangle]] formed by two events and [[isotropic line]]s through them. Time-like or space-like separations correspond to oppositely [[orientation (vector space)|oriented]] rectangles, one type considered to have rectangles of negative area. The case of two events separated by light corresponds to the rectangle degenerating to the segment between the events and zero area.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Yaglom|first1=I.M.|last2=Shenitzer|first2=Abe|title=A Simple Non-Euclidean Geometry and Its Physical Basis: An Elementary Account of Galilean Geometry and the Galilean Principle of Relativity|date=1979|publisher=Springer-Verlag|location=New York|isbn=0387903321|edition=1st}}</ref> The transformations leaving interval-length invariant are the area-preserving [[squeeze mapping]]s.
The parameters traditionally used rely on quadrature of the hyperbola, which is the [[natural logarithm]]. This transcendental function is essential in mathematical analysis as its inverse unites [[circular function]]s and [[hyperbolic function]]s: The [[exponential function]], e<sup>''t''</sup>, ''t'' a real number, used in the [[hyperbola]] (e<sup>''t''</sup>, e<sup>–''t''</sup> ), generates [[hyperbolic sector]]s and the [[hyperbolic angle]] parameter. The functions cosh and sinh, used with [[rapidity]] as hyperbolic angle, provide the common representation of squeeze in the form
<math>\begin{pmatrix}\cosh \phi & \sinh \phi \\ \sinh \phi & \cosh \phi \end{pmatrix},</math> or as the [[split-complex number|split-complex unit]]
<math>e^{j \phi} = \cosh \phi \ + j \ \sinh \phi .</math>
===Generalized spacetime (extra dimensions ===
{{main|extra dimensions}}
The term ''spacetime'' has taken on a generalized meaning beyond treating spacetime events with the normal 3+1 dimensions{{clarify|what is that meaning?|date=March 2017}}. Other{{which|date=March 2017}} proposed spacetime theories include additional dimensions—normally [[spatial dimension|spatial]] but there exist some{{which|date=March 2017}} theories that include additional temporal dimensions, and even some, such as [[superspace]] of [[supersymmetric theories]], that include dimensions that are neither temporal nor spatial.
The number of dimensions required to describe the universe is still an [[open question in physics|open question]]{{why|date=March 2017}}. Theories such as [[string theory]] predict 10 or 26 dimensions (with [[M-theory]] predicting [[11-dimensional spacetime|11 dimensions]]{{why|date=March 2017}}: 10 spatial and 1 temporal). The existence of more than four dimensions only appears to make a difference at [[subatomic scale]]s.{{why|date=March 2017}}<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kopeikin|first1=Sergei M.|last2=Efroimsky|first2=Michael|last3=Kaplan|first3=George|title=Relativistic Celestial Mechanics of the Solar System|date=2011|publisher=Wiley-VCH|location=Weinheim|isbn=3527634576|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uN5_DQWSR14C&pg=PT157|accessdate=2016-02-28}}</ref>
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