Monday, November 07, 2005

hyperspace

If we see everything in black and white, we could look

at the negative and see the oposite of the exact same

picture. Now, think of the universe in the same sense,

various clusters of varying densities of matter

interspersed within empty space. Now turn it around

and think of that space between the substance. What

properties does it have?

If two flashlights were together pointing in opposite

directions and one was to turn them on and off

simultaneous, so that two pulses of light were emitted in

opposite directions, the space between the pulses

would increase in size at twice the speed of light. This

shows that, although no particlecan travel faster than

the speed of light, space can!


Thinking more about this, one must realize that space

could not have been created before matter. As the

original matter expanded outward and started to cluster

do to gravitational forces, space started to form.

So it may not be that the universe is expanding into

empty space but empty space is being created within

our universe. If this is the case, then empty space will

still have the occational partical in it, left behind from

gravitational pull. Thus, empty space is not completely

empty but has varying degrees of emptyness all being

greater than zero. One could figure that the closer to

zero nearly empty space becomes, the greater the

distance from anything of substance.

f=force m=mass a=acceleration

f=ma
a=f/m

If 'm' is zero and and if there is any 'f' at all then 'a'

becomes infinite.

Since the time of the big bang, matter has become

more dispearsed in the universe, though concentrating

in some areas (galaxies), thus, where 'm' becomes

lower, between the clusters of matter(inter-galactic

space), the volume of space increases towards infinity
But one may say that you can't have any 'f' without 'm'.
Yet, light is an energy that seems to push away from its

source while gravity is a energy that seems to pull

toward its source.

Empty space by its own nature, over time, expands its

volume toward infinity, and can expand, at a rate,

faster than the speed of light, I think.