Here's my crackpot theory of the universe: it was born from the collapse of a Black Hole inside a much larger one, while every Black Hole in our universe has another inside it. This works spatially because universes expand infinitely, and Black Holes are inwardly infinite. Black Holes expand inwards from our perspective and outwards from all that's inside them. At the Event Horizon, the four Space-time dimensions fold in on one another. This is the boundary of a Black Hole, where its gravity is so strong that nothing can escape it, even light. Visually I think perspectives get flipped here since light stops and travels backwards, turning the four space-time dimensions inside out.
This theory would also explain the Big Bang cosmology: how light could collapse on itself at the Event Horizon, how it could start bending inward and go on forever, sounds remarkably like the situation after the Big Bang. It makes sense according to the Conservation of Energy law; where else could the energy in a Black Hole go? It can’t simply disappear. It also makes sense in relativistic terms; if gravity bends space and brings everything around it toward itself, shouldn't antigravity expand space and all the matter in the universe, thus creating more and more antimatter to counterbalance the added matter to the Black Hole?
In theoretical physics there is such a thing is a White Hole, which sounds a lot like what I've described here. It isn't conventional to connect the two together (seeing as they are thought to occur separately from each other), but if you were to do it then the figure would look something like an hourglass. At the center, the two "universes" meet at a singularity, where there is simultaneously a propagation of one universe's Big Bang and another's annihilation, or Big Crunch. The White Hole expands infinitely inside the Black Hole. Its acceleration increases exponentially after a certain period of time, just the way our universe has done. It makes you wonder in what direction the singularity in our universe is going. We can't see it because the curvature of the universe prevents us from looking that far back into the past.
It's a difficult theory to wrap my brain around, but beautiful nonetheless. It offers a circular view of the three dimensions, so that when we think of time and space as infinite they're really just going in circles. Time inside our “White Hole” is going forwards, which means that if you were to travel through a Black Hole you would start aging backwards.
No comments:
Post a Comment