Re: Cyclical Universe based on Big Rip Scenario Thank you Rufus,
Just over a year ago I started looking, trying to explain an experience. It required a different physics and so those drawings are an attempt to describe the idea.
From the cyclical point of view being fully contained in an inversion there is no loss of energy as a crunch causes a repeat and the rotation of the final pairing translates into a linear release of energy as the whole process inverts again.
I admit that looking at quantum and requiring an inner boundary made me look for something physical, tangible and that is why the boundary of the proton seemed right, it just had the right feel. That was the many worlds aspect all contained in one universe, a form with force and flow.
It got me looking at the astronomy pictures as a 3D warp of a flat picture, not two galaxies but one a mirror reflection of the other ... even bent at right angles. It still doesn't answer the question of where it all began, perhaps that one is best left to theologians. I work or perhaps play with mental imagery.
When you asked where does all the matter come from in the first place I had misread the intent and thought of a first instance, I visualised a super condensate brilliant white ... perhaps pure thought.
The matter for this universe is the cooled inflation a halted super-condensate of contained energy. Being unable to make more space in this concept of creating space being a huge expenditure of energy. It forms thermals within itself, the r^2 component of a circle gives the cone folding in and the linear displacement gives the rotation or spin ... this would account for coriolis effect and polhode movement.
I have been asked on other forums to consider whether I am being reasonable or delusional to be honest. I am just trying to apply a logic to a very strange experience of intuitive reasoning, I was backing out quietly and hoping that this would be a safe Christmas.
__________________ "The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and all science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eyes are closed."...Albert Einstein |