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They call it the "fabric of reality" because that's a good metaphor to describe how gravity works. (Or at least I assume that's where it came from, I could very well be wrong.)
When you stretch a fabric thin, and place something heavy in it, it's going to sink and stretch the fabric down with it. Then, if you place a smaller object next to the larger one, it's going to roll around the larger one, gradually moving closer as it goes down the slope created by the larger object.
That might be hard to visualize, so here's a neat video I found.
Edit: guys I think you're reading too much into this I wasn't trying to provide a foolproof explanation of how gravity works I was just trying to relate an interesting metaphor to a piece of linguistics.
And I wasn't even right, a quick google search says the term predates our understanding of the universe. Its probably a coincidence.
Can spacetime be ripped or torn? Or is the fabric metaphor simply a way of understanding and visualizing it?
If cosmic inflation is correct, probably not. Inflation is our best theory of the beginning of the universe.
According to inflation, spacetime expanded exponentially from an infinitesimal point to many billions of light-years across. As far as we can tell, the universe is expanding again but at a much slower rate, due to dark energy.
Spacetime survived the inflationary period, so it looks like it doesn't have a "tear" mechanism.
Another way to think of it, is to assume once torn, what is it tearing "into". If you rip a bit of fabric, you look through to the other side, nothing special. If you tear our 4-dimentional spacetime, what are you looking at when you look "through" the ripped portion? This implies that out 4D spacetime is somehow existing in a higher dimensional reality.
It would make black holes more interesting if they were tears, anything over x mass just ziiiiippppp
Oh. That's a thought
i'm aboslutely certain it's bunk or science would have been all over that. Feels right tho...
One could argue that's what primrose squares show. In fact I think that's how primrose came up with them
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4v9A9hQUcBQ&pp=ygUacHJpbXJvc2Ugc3F1YXJlcyBzcGFjZXRpbWU%3D