Skybuck Flying
2016-08-22 05:09:28 UTC
Einstein said space/time itself is bendeable/warpable or something like
that.
Take a plastic bag, make a ring with your thumb and finger, place plastic
bag over the ring and then blow into the ring.
This will create a bubble on the other side of the ring, which also seems
like an explosion took place.
This is basically what could have happened where our universe was "created
during the big bang".
In reality it wasn't created but it was "warped"/"blown" into a bubble,
perhaps by a big star collapsing in on itself and somehow creating a "warp
bubble" as large as our universe that somehow keeps growing which could also
explain the expanding of the universe.
On the other side of this ring/hole matter is still being blown into it and
comes outside of the other side of the ring since there is basically nothing
there to stop it, so our universe will keep expanding and sucking in
matter/space/time from the rest of the galaxy... and yes very maybe it will
lead to some kind of rip :) not sure if space/time itself can rip ;)
This could mean that our universe is part of a much larger universe.
This would also mean that there has to be a center of our universe
somewhere... and our universe might be expanding in just one direction...
the other side of the ring basically... perhaps this is detectable... which
could then prove this warp bubble hypothesis.
Bye,
Skybuck.
that.
Take a plastic bag, make a ring with your thumb and finger, place plastic
bag over the ring and then blow into the ring.
This will create a bubble on the other side of the ring, which also seems
like an explosion took place.
This is basically what could have happened where our universe was "created
during the big bang".
In reality it wasn't created but it was "warped"/"blown" into a bubble,
perhaps by a big star collapsing in on itself and somehow creating a "warp
bubble" as large as our universe that somehow keeps growing which could also
explain the expanding of the universe.
On the other side of this ring/hole matter is still being blown into it and
comes outside of the other side of the ring since there is basically nothing
there to stop it, so our universe will keep expanding and sucking in
matter/space/time from the rest of the galaxy... and yes very maybe it will
lead to some kind of rip :) not sure if space/time itself can rip ;)
This could mean that our universe is part of a much larger universe.
This would also mean that there has to be a center of our universe
somewhere... and our universe might be expanding in just one direction...
the other side of the ring basically... perhaps this is detectable... which
could then prove this warp bubble hypothesis.
Bye,
Skybuck.