"parallel universes"
The universe is a highly-complex system. There is a unique property that allows it to possess an infinite number of universes. For now, the universes are contained within our universe’s horizon; it is possible that they all began as a part of our universe itself.
However, if one of the two universes appears out of the horizon, we could call it the third universe outside the universe, and classify it according to its composition and its history.
The very first universe could have existed in an abstract universe, according to the three-dimensional vector-space-space structure of the universe. The second universe could have arisen through a collision between two of the first universes.
Each of the
universes contained an infinite number of universes within them. Even if there
was a conflict in the universe, there would be an infinite number of universes
that remained in the universe.
But there is a problem. If the second universe was more extended than the first one, then a particle could come from one universe and go to another universe and vice versa. In this case, we would not be able to distinguish the original universe from the universes that occurred afterward.
Theoretically, we could call all of the universes
“parallel universes,” in which parallel quantum processes were taking place.
This problem is not limited to our universe. It is a universal property of the
universe, regardless of its composition.
We might observe the
universe as a whole, and we might also observe some particular dimensions or
particles that appear within it. But these two possibilities are mutually
inconsistent. We could still observe our universe as a universe, but the
universe would also exist as a parallel universe.
This situation might occur, depending on the universe’s composition. For example, if it is a three-dimensional universe that is made of completely abstract layers of different kinds of particles, this is what we might observe.
This scenario would be impossible for a two-dimensional universe, because it could not have a depth below the horizon. This two-dimensional universe would have no parallel universes in which parallel particles could come in and out of it.
The
existence of the universes that our universe contains would be determined by
the second universe’s existence, which would determine the possibility of
parallel particles in that universe.
All of the parallel
universes that exist in our universe might exist in the third universe. And
this third universe could also have any number of universes within it. This
universe might exist in a universe where only a certain quantity of each type
of particle could exist in the universe. In this case, the third universe might
appear out of the universe’s horizon because the number of particles was very
small.
There is an infinite number of universes that exist beyond the horizon. Our universe might be the first and only universe in a three-dimensional universe. But this might not be a unique scenario.
There might be infinite parallel universes in the third
universe. When the universe expands and its surface becomes the second
universe, we would also observe a parallel universe there.
If the universe exists in a universe like ours, then the universe must have the same fundamental laws of physics. Each of the universes that exist in our universe is completely different from the universe that exists beyond the horizon.
The two universes that our universe contains are complete reflections of each other, according to the universe’s laws of physics.
Therefore, each universe must be a universe that occurs in another universe, in some parallel universe beyond the horizon. This universe is called the third universe beyond the horizon.
A universe within
which parallel particles could be present cannot exist independently of any
other universe. These parallel universes must exist in some universe that is
made of a continuous ocean of alternate realities. This is an impossible
scenario, according to our current understanding of physics.
And a universe that is
made up of an infinite number of universes with identical laws of physics
cannot be our universe, because this universe would not have the space for an
infinite number of parallel universes to exist, according to our current
understanding of space and time.
0 Comment to "third universe beyond our universe?"
एक टिप्पणी भेजें
Useful, valuable comments are welcome!!!