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Posted

Perhaps dark energy/cosmic expansion is simply an affect of a big crunch?

Allow me to elucidate: When a 'crunch' condenses below its Schwarzchild Radius, I propose a duality is formed, being the Lorentz Transform imaginary (complex number) values associated with <Sr distances.

We know time = 0 at an event horizon; therefore, beneath this 'boundary', t becomes a dualistic positive/negative ..... basically, the inner convergence co-manifests as retrograde, outriding expansion. This suggests our universe may indeed be cyclic /wavicle like, and delightfully explains why the expansion rate is steadily increasing, as the condensing crunch would produce exponetially increasing t/ti values.

Even wilder speculation: I believe every particle, even the humble photon may obey this simple process, albeit,of differing singularity class composition (implying the universe is just another particle, based about a high order  n-dimensional hypertorus).

Energy convergence with regards to a photon, ultimately produces a singularity via its very own Schwarzchild radius (albeit at extremely small scale distance) i.e. If a photons relativistic mass (hf/c^2 - yes I know photons do not possess mass) is substituted for M in calculating a Schwarzchild Radius: 2GM/C^2. This photon, say in the visible spectrum (around 600 THz) would produce a figure of about 10^-62 meters ....... totally smaller than Planck length!

The photonic cycle is one of 720° (360° positive/ 360° negative), in which convergence and expansion co-exist simultaneously. Expansion above the Sr can be thought of as the magnetic component. Similarly, condensation beneath; manifests as the electric component; thus, this duality operates with 180° phase differential, perfectly matching/describing electromagnetism, with each switching identities @ the Sr 'boundary'.

Musing on ..... your average photon cycles a tad more rapidly than our universe, say 300Ghz compared to maybe once in a trillion years - how can this be so? ..... well, it's all to do with dimensionality. With increasing dimensionality, energy is sprawled about exponentially thinner.

So what of our universe?

A cosmos of high order dimensionality may have energy spread out rather sparse ..... it's energy concentration that determines frequency i.e. low energy photons cycle slower than high ones.

Multiverse theory predicts a headsplatteringly large number of parallel universes (>10^500) So what if our cosmos manifests as merely one 1 superstate, a self interacting wavicle of varying dimensionality/phase? ..... could it be that we're actually all part of this multiverse already?

In 1922, Ray Cummings scribed;- "Time, is what keeps everything from happening at once" .... perhaps space, similarly, is that which allows all possible states to occur @ once?

This type of thinking suggests everything in the universe is all inextricably connected, and from a far higher dimensional viewpoint is but one solitary thing.

Posted
3 hours ago, David Paul said:

"Time, is what keeps everything from happening at once

I don't think that's a good statement. Time is what causes things to happen. Without time nothing happens.

Posted
7 hours ago, David Paul said:

Perhaps dark energy/cosmic expansion is simply an affect of a big crunch?

It is possible that expansion is a result of a Big Crunch/Bounce. However, the rate of expansion is accelerating, hence dark energy, which suggests it won’t “crunch” again and therefore probably didn’t before. 

7 hours ago, David Paul said:

When a 'crunch' condenses below its Schwarzchild Radius

The Schwarzschild metric describes a spherically symmetrical distribution of mass (in an otherwise empty universe). 

This obviously isn’t relevant to a collapsing (or expanding) universe. 

7 hours ago, David Paul said:

Lorentz Transform imaginary (complex number) values associated with <Sr distances.

There are no imaginary values inside the Schwarzschild radius. And I can’t see how the Lorentz transform is relevant. 

I gave up at this pint I’m afraid. 

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