Context: I'm a science fiction author. I need an excuse for FTL, and I'm pretty attached to the idea of a discrete fifth dimension, allowing (normal) fourth dimensional space to be bypassed in a similar manner to Interstellar's "pencil-passing-through-sheet-of-paper" wormhole metaphor for those who are familiar. Essentially, it'd be all kinds of awesome if I could concoct an at least vaguely scientific explanation for some beings having a fifth dimensional presence along with the "normal four".
However, a good (physics-minded) friend of me very reasonably informed me that an accessible fifth dimension would royally screw with the ability to form stars, life, and virtually everything as we know it. And... yeah, they have a point. If all particles can move not only on the x, y, and z axis, but also the w axis, reasonably they'd collide and interact much less frequently.
Can I construct a fourth spatial dimension that functions similarly to the other three and doesn't completely render life as we know it impossible?
The alternatives I've already somewhat considered are:
First, a discrete/detached plane similar to... um, Minecraft's Nether. (yeah go easy on me I couldn't think of a better example...) Ostensibly, this would effectively gatekeep particles from moving from one plane to the other willy-nilly, I just find it somewhat unfounded/uninteresting, plus it reeks of a thoughtless fantasy cop-out. Sub-question 1 is thus: is there any theory or way to make a literal warp plane less... simplistic?
- How would a warp plane work?
- How would entry/exit play out?
- Is there any scientific literature to back up its hypothetical function?
Second, Kaluza-Klein theory or its many permutations. Not going to lie, I understand very little of the actual theory from the papers I've read (numerous), I'm a biochemist for a reason. What I could however glean was that Kaluza-Klein operates on the subatomic level--- very friggin' tiny--- and, thus, wouldn't affect macro size anything much at all. Double edged sword. Kaluza-Klein looks promising because of just how diverse the theory and its successors have grown, but I don't know enough to even determine if it could be useful at all on the intergalactic and very much macro-scale application I'm gunning for. Does anyone know enough about the K-K theory to determine whether there's some subset that could permit a discrete 5th dimension that is travel-able by large objects and doesn't try to stab classical physics in its sleep?
I'd love to hear any two cents that you guys could throw into this pool. This one's been keeping me up for a bit.
If all particles can move not only on the x, y, and z axis...
your physics-minded friends have led you astray. It's like saying a shadow has trouble forming because light can move in three dimensions. Some particles flow along magnetic field lines in 3D, but what if magnetism cannot transcend into the 4th D? What happens to a group of special particles unknown to science today that can exist in all 4D but also interact with magnetic field lines and it meets two magnetic fields that are perpendicular to one another in the 4th D? (Cool!) ... (*Continued*) $\endgroup$