The existence of parallel universes may seem like something cooked up by science fiction writers, with little relevance to modern theoretical physics.
We believe, though we cannot yet prove, that our multiverse of universes is 11-dimensional. So think of this 11-dimensional arena and in this arena there are bubbles, bubbles that float and the skin of the bubble represents an entire universe, so we’re like flies trapped on fly paper.
The Large Hadron Collider earned its fame finding the Higgs boson particle, the so-called “God particle,” but it failed to find something very important it was looking for—superpartner particles.
Dr. Alan Ross Hugenot has spent decades contemplating the conundrums of physics, along with the enigma of human consciousness.
This model could solve the problem of the relationship between matter and mind, and provide a framework for understanding phenomena such as dreams and out-of-body experiences.
The conventional understanding of gravity just doesn’t seem to fit with what we’re learning about the cosmos and physics, say some scientists.
The existence of parallel universes may seem like something cooked up by science fiction writers, with little relevance to modern theoretical physics.
We believe, though we cannot yet prove, that our multiverse of universes is 11-dimensional. So think of this 11-dimensional arena and in this arena there are bubbles, bubbles that float and the skin of the bubble represents an entire universe, so we’re like flies trapped on fly paper.
The Large Hadron Collider earned its fame finding the Higgs boson particle, the so-called “God particle,” but it failed to find something very important it was looking for—superpartner particles.
Dr. Alan Ross Hugenot has spent decades contemplating the conundrums of physics, along with the enigma of human consciousness.
This model could solve the problem of the relationship between matter and mind, and provide a framework for understanding phenomena such as dreams and out-of-body experiences.
The conventional understanding of gravity just doesn’t seem to fit with what we’re learning about the cosmos and physics, say some scientists.