The notion of spacetime having more than four dimensions is of interest in its own mathematical right. Its appearance in physics can be rooted to attempts of unifying the
fundamental interactions, originally
gravity and
electromagnetism. These ideas prevail in
string theory and beyond. The idea of
complex spacetime has received considerably less attention, but it has been considered in conjunction with the
Lorentz–Dirac equation and the Maxwell equations. Other ideas include mapping real spacetime into a complex representation space of , see
twistor theory. In 1919,
Theodor Kaluza posted his 5-dimensional extension of
general relativity to
Albert Einstein, who was impressed with how the equations of
electromagnetism emerged from Kaluza's theory. In 1926,
Oskar Klein suggested that Kaluza's extra dimension might be "
curled up" into an extremely small circle, as if a
circular topology is hidden within every point in space. Instead of being another spatial dimension, the extra dimension could be thought of as an angle, which created a
hyper-dimension as it spun through 360°. This 5d theory is named
Kaluza–Klein theory. In 1932, Hsin P. Soh of
MIT, advised by
Arthur Eddington, published a theory attempting to unify gravitation and electromagnetism within a complex 4-dimensional
Riemannian geometry. The
line element ds2 is complex-valued, so that the real part corresponds to mass and gravitation, while the imaginary part with charge and electromagnetism. The usual space
x,
y,
z and time
t coordinates themselves are real and spacetime is not complex, but tangent spaces are allowed to be. For several decades after Einstein published his
general theory of relativity in 1915, he tried to unify
gravity with
electromagnetism to create a
unified field theory explaining both interactions. In the latter years of
World War II, Einstein began considering complex spacetime geometries of various kinds. In 1953,
Wolfgang Pauli generalised the
Kaluza–Klein theory to a six-dimensional space, and (using
dimensional reduction) derived the essentials of an
gauge theory (applied in quantum mechanics to the
electroweak interaction), as if Klein's "curled up" circle had become the surface of an infinitesimal
hypersphere. In 1975,
Jerzy Plebanski published "Some Solutions of Complex Albert Einstein Equations". There have been attempts to formulate the
Abraham–Lorentz force in complex spacetime by
analytic continuation. ==See also==