This is just a radical theory I came up with. I'd like to hear a physicist's thought.
What if EVERYTHING in the universe is composed of one single atom, moving at a constant rate - the speed of light - to create everything that exists?
Think of pixels on your television - each one is lit starting from the top left corner, and moving in sequence to fill the screen. This composes one frame. Many frames per second make up the moving image we see.
What if life worked in the same manner and that one atom was composing everything? This would explain where all the "mass" in the universe came from. The smallest fraction of time may actually take an enormous amount of time to compose, but in our frame of reference, it moves seamlessly and at a constant rate.
The theory of relativity suggests non-simultaneousness and time dilation, both which would play major parts in supporting this theory.
It seems impossible, but the laws of Physics do not care if the human brain can comprehend them.
2006-07-07
01:38:16
·
11 answers
·
asked by
clone1973
5
in
Physics