When introducing Robertson-Walker metrics, Carroll's suggests that we
consider our spacetime to be $R \times \Sigma$, where $R$ represents the time direction and $\Sigma$ is a maximally symmetric three-manifold.
He then goes on to discuss the curvature on $\Sigma$ which yields the metric on this three-surface
$d\sigma^2=\frac{d \bar{r}^2}{1-k\bar{r}^2}+\bar{r}^2d\Omega^2$
Case $k=0$ corresponds to no curvature and is called flat. So the metric, after introducing a new radial coordinate $\chi$ defined by $d\chi=\frac{d\bar{r}}{\sqrt{1-k\bar{r}^2}}$, the flat metric on $\Sigma$ becomes
$d\sigma^2=d\chi^2+\chi^2d\Omega^2$
$d\sigma^2=dx^2+dy^2+dz^2$
which is simply flat Euclidean space.
Carroll then points out that
Globally, it could describe $R^3$ or a more complicated manifold, such as the three-torus $S^1 \times S^1 \times S^1$.
I see that the metric on $S^1 \times S^1 \times S^1$ is also given by $d\theta^2+d\phi^2+d\psi^2$ and therefore there could be a fourth spatial dimension in which $\Sigma$ is a submanifold.
However, I am unsure how can we test by experiments or cosmological observations to know for sure whether the flat metric is indeed Euclidean or to conclude a more complicated global three-torus geometry.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2014-08-14 08:28 (UCT), posted by SE-user Victor Vahidi Motti