出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/25 03:27 UTC 版)
First use appears c. 1594. From worm + hole. In the scientific sense, introduced by John Archibald Wheeler in 1957.
wormhole (plural wormholes)
wormhole (third-person singular simple present wormholes, present participle wormholing, simple past and past participle wormholed)
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/02/12 22:02 UTC 版)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/06/21 15:33 UTC 版)
In physics, a wormhole is a hypothetical topological feature of spacetime that would be, fundamentally, a "shortcut" through spacetime. For a simple visual explanation of a wormhole, consider spacetime visualized as a two-dimensional (2D) surface. If this surface is folded along a third dimension, it allows one to picture a wormhole "bridge". (Please note, though, that this is merely a visualization displayed to convey an essentially unvisualisable structure existing in 4 or more dimensions. The parts of the wormhole could be higher-dimensional analogues for the parts of the curved 2D surface; for example, instead of mouths which are circular holes in a 2D plane, a real wormhole's mouths could be spheres in 3D space.) A wormhole is, in theory, much like a tunnel with two ends each in separate points in spacetime, or it can be also known as two connecting black holes.
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| ・wormhole | |
| ・Coleraine | |
| ・All workers | |
| ・Gudrun | |
| ・single hit | |
| ・kinn | |
| ・Assertion | |
| ・re-marking | |
| ・conatus | |
| ・padel |