English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

This is my theory:

Absense -----> Caved--------> Close
Nothing ------> Equilibrium----> Neutral >>> Centerpoint (Higgs Field, 0 spin)
Limit ---------> Bound--------> Open

TIME EXPANSION >>>>
Hubble Constant ~ 81! ~ 10^120
Elements swapping characteristics in same region ---> Summation = (0, 0, 0) ---> Three spatial dimensions ---> Spatial Filling ---> Differentiation and separation ---> Three completely opposing dark matter halos (like in the Millennium Simulation).

Lowest Quantum Time (Planck Time, 10^-44 seconds)

Self Reliancy = Gravitational Force
Simultaneous Elements' Permutation = Weak Nuclear Force
Close-Open Opposition = Electromagnetic Force
Equilibrium Behavior = Strong Nuclear Force
Nothingness ----> Unstableness ----> Time ----> Decay
Dark Matter = Closed Set ~ 25 %
Dark Energy = Equilibrial (Summation of close and open) and open sets ~ 75 %

Dark energy travels faster than dark matter because there is more dA/dt to travel.

What is your theory?

2007-08-19 12:16:52 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

8 answers

Here's God's Opinion.... God SPOKE all things into existence with His Word:

" By the Word of the Lord were the heavens created, and all the host of them by the breath of His mouth.... For HE SPAKE AND IT WAS DONE; HE COMMANDED AND IT STOOD FAST". (psalm 33:6-9)

2007-08-19 12:27:20 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 8

One possibility is the colliding branes theory,
The Universe consists of two branes (surfaces) bounding an extra dimension, and the singularity corresponds to a collision and bounce of the two branes.
I imagine billions of giant bubbles
floating in some higher dimesion space
bouncing and colliding with each other,
forming new universes with different dimensions
and maybe even new properties.

Another possibility is that some black holes
in the center of our galaxies will eventually become
unstable and explode. This could take a very long time.
One might eventually reach a critical event horizon width.
It is intuitive to me that gravity at the center of black holes
could be repulsive because of the higgs field difference.
But the event horizon will make that a non issue until
the value of the higgs field becomes negative all the
way out to the event horizon. Then it explodes.
When it explodes it sets off a chain reaction
with other galaxies black holes and they continue to
explode across the universe setting up a reason
for the non-regularity in the universe.
This is my own personal theory.

Questions: If gravity has a negative value at the center
of a black hole, are black holes hollow?
Would they become 2 branes when the mass contained
reaches the event horizon, the gravitaional force on both
sides squeezing the mass into a flat shape, or are they
always 2 branes, the internal surface growing towards the
event horizon as mass is added?

2007-08-19 20:29:47 · answer #2 · answered by Robert L 4 · 0 0

I believe in a form of the steady state theory. A particle or particle pair has a certain probability to 'come out', 'be created' from the quantum fluctuations of the vacuum. Roughly, the higher the mass of the particle the less likely the particle is to be created. It would also be inversely proportional to the proximity of surrounding matter. The big bang particle is a very extremely improbable creation. This theory implies that the extended universe has big bangs going on throughout, but spaced extremely far away from each other. I believe that negative mass exists but is not observable. It acts on positive mass and is responsible for motion by means of a gravitational push-pull.
I also have a pet theory that gravitation alternates between attraction and repulsion. For example, casimir force and the cosmological force which is repulsive at great distances. But gravitation is found to be extremely accurately inverse square, but if you look at the gamma function for negative values you will notice that it gets closer and closer to rectangular boxes. So the gamma function can be used to splice together separate curves with any arbitrary accuracy within any specified intervals. I am also of the opinion that this same gravitational force varies cyclicly over the quantum mechanical interval, so that quantum mechanics comes from a gravitational force that acts something like a harmonic oscillator in the way the force varies with distance. But don't confuse yourself with an analysis of the smallness of the gravitational constant. Gravity behaves differently at each level, and has a different relative strength, but it is all just one curve, to the construction of strings, to quantum mechanics, to the Casimir force, to the classical inverse square force, to the cosmological repelling force. The properties of electric charge arises as a sqrt(-1) analogue of mass; the electromagnetic force the sqrt(-1) version of the gravitational force.

2007-08-19 19:51:08 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Two Branes collided acording to String Theory.

2007-08-19 20:14:07 · answer #4 · answered by | König | 2 · 0 1

this isnt my theory, and i personally dont believe it, but i find it interesting and would like to share it.

one theory, i doubt its popular, is that all of the matter in the universe comes from another, and at the center of ours is a white hole, where all of the matter from a block hole goes after it is sucked into the black hole. so by that theory, inside every black hole is another universe, and we are the just inside of a black hole. strange, but interesting.

2007-08-20 00:28:27 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

35 LOS/dT (2012.337 Z + 217/(A+B) = Delay Factor 1

You never mentioned that one time.
So, in all probability you have never sat down and worked through any of this all by yourself.

2007-08-19 22:52:29 · answer #6 · answered by zahbudar 6 · 0 0

My theory is that your theory is a bunch of words strung together that don't mean anything.

2007-08-19 21:00:33 · answer #7 · answered by Michael da Man 6 · 1 0

GOD let one go we call it big bang

2007-08-19 19:25:52 · answer #8 · answered by Sorry deleted 4 · 1 3

fedest.com, questions and answers