Greg Parker image  

“I'm only a four-dimensional creature.
Haven't got a clue how to visualise infinity.
Even Einstein hadn't. I know because I asked him.”

Sir Patrick Moore.
 

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 Welcome to the Multi-Universe page
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It wasn't all that long ago that Science thought that our Universe was it, the beginning and end to all matter.
Oh, how times have changed, and in just a few short years.
Everything that there was, is, or ever could be, was thought to be encapsulated within our amazingly huge Universe. Only those crazy Science-Fiction writers thought different and postulated the idea of other Universe's. But that was brushed away as only sheer imagination and nothing else.
Again...oh, how times have changed.

Because, you see, the accepted laws of Physics and Quantum Physics just didn't add up, or perhaps compliment each other would be a better phrase. So Scientists had to re-evaluate the single (or uni) verse theory, and it seems that by adding in the theory of multi-Universe's then they were on the right track in coming up with a marriage between all branches of Physics.

What is a MULTI-VERSE?

The multi-verse (or meta-universe) is the hypothetical set of multiple possible Universe's (including our Universe) that together comprise everything that physically exists.... the entirety of space and time, all forms of matter, energy and momentum, and the physical laws constants and constraints that govern them.

The different Universe's within the multi-verse are sometimes called Parallel Universe's.
The structure of the multi- verse, the nature of each Universe within it, and the relationship between the various constituent Universe's, depend on the specific multi-verse hypothesis considered.

 

What are Parallel Universe's?

Recent discoveries in Quantum physics (the study of the physics of sub-atomic particles) and in Cosmology (the branch of astronomy and astrophysics that deals with the Universe taken as a whole) shed new light on how mind interacts with matter.  These discoveries compel acceptance of the idea that there is far more than just one Universe and that we constantly interact with many of these “hiddenUniverse's.

So, Scientists now believe there may really be a Parallel Universe In fact, there may be an infinite number of Parallel Universe's, and we just happen to be living in one of them. These other Universe's contain space, time and strange forms of exotic matter. Some of them may even contain you, in a slightly different form ...taller perhaps?
Astonishingly, some scientists believe that these Parallel Universe's exist less than one millimeter away from us. In fact, our Gravity may just be just a weak signal leaking out of another Universe into ours.

So it just well be that:
In another Universe.... Germany won the 1st World War, never mind the second.
In another Universe.... Ireland won the 1990 World Cup ....yeah.
In another George Bush never got to be President.
And in yet another John F Kennedy never got assassinated and so on and on...

Hugh Everett first put forward the theory of "Parallel Universes" in 1957.
David Deutsch, a research fellow at the Department of Astrophysics, Oxford, and a professor at the University of Texas, tells us:

I think it's safe to say that there is a very large, probably infinite, number of these Universe's.  Many of them are very different from ours, but some of them differ only in some minute detail like the position of a book on a table, and are identical in every other respect.

Serious scientists dismissed all this speculation as absurd. But now it seems the speculation wasn't absurd enough. Parallel Universe's really do exist and they are much stranger than even the science fiction writers dared to imagine.

Bubble Universe's

It all started when super-string theory, hyper-space and dark matter made physicists realise that the three dimensions we thought described the Universe weren't enough.
They believe that there are actually 11 dimensions. By the time they had finished they'd come to the conclusion that our Universe is just one bubble among an infinite number of membranous bubbles which ripple as they wobble through the 11th dimension. Each Universe may exist as a bubble with its own laws of Physics.

Imagine what might happen if two such Bubble Universe's touched. Neil Turok from Cambridge, Burt Ovrut from the University of Pennsylvania and Paul Steinhardt from Princeton believe that has happened.
The result?
A very big bang and ...yes you guessed it ...a new Universe was born - our Universe.

The idea has shocked the scientific community; has turned the conventional Big Bang theory on its head. And it may well be that the Big Bang wasn't really the beginning of everything after all. Time and Space all existed before it.

In fact Big Bangs may happen all the time.
Of course this extraordinary story about the origin of our Universe has one alarming implication... if a collision started our Universe, could it happen again?
Anything is possible in this extra-dimensional Cosmos of ours.
Perhaps out there in multi space there is another Universe heading directly towards us - it may only be a matter of time before we collide.

 


My local Astronomy group

 

Tit-bit-of-info

Nearly all of the information that falls into a Black Hole escapes back out, a controversial new study argues. The work suggests that Black Holes could one day be used as incredibly accurate quantum computers - if enormous theoretical and practical hurdles can first be overcome.

star logoRecommended Links
astronomy.ie
Astronomy Ireland
is without the most popular Astronomy club in Ireland. Their onward goal of popularising Astronomy has been a great success.

The NASA web-site brings you images, videos and interactive features from the unique perspective of America's space agency. Get the latest updates on NASA missions, great downloads, super-dooper interactive pages etc.

The Sky at Night Sir Patrick Moore first presented this program in April 1957, and it became the longest running television program in the world, well loved by professional, amateur and arm-chair astronomers alike. The fact that the site is no longer been updated by the BBC doesn't make any difference as far as I can see. The wealth of information on past occurrences in Astronomy makes the site well worth visiting, for research as well as nostalgia.

 
     

Pencil logoContact me at the following:

the.universe.ie@gmail.com

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