The Laffey Universe Theory of Fabric of Time and Space
The Laffey Universe Theory of Fabric of Time and Space
Spacetime is infinite, so is the speed of time from a relative perspective. Mass bends spacetime, which slows down spacetime in its gravitational field. Black holes have massive amounts of mass, and bend spacetime by massive amounts. Time also slows down in the gravitational field of a black hole by a massive amount. Gravitational fields slow the spacetime of the universe.
The big bang was a huge explosion, and the expanse is huge, the huge cluster of space dust acted like a whole gravitational field for the spaces outside the universe. Meaning our universe is a black hole and we are the singularity, which also explains why black holes have huge bends in spacetime and gravity. The universe expanded more and more, as spacetime sped up. Space dust combined into quarks, protons, neutrons, electrons, and so forth, and eventually became the universe at the timeframe we live in now. Superclusters of galaxies, galaxies themselves host black holes in the center, slowing down spacetime in the vicinity.
Scientists are studying the rotation of galaxies, and they are confused on why the orbit of the stars in the galaxy seem uniform at a certain velocity. Calculations with the laws of physics say that the closer stars to the super massive black hole will orbit faster than the farther stars in orbit. From our perspective, it is visually not the case. That led to scientists believing dark energy was keeping the galaxies from falling apart and keeping the outer stars in orbit. Now that could be true, but the reason with this theory on why we perceive the orbit of the stars around the galaxy that way is because of the super massive black hole in the center of the galaxy that the stars orbit around. Gravity bends spacetime and light, and the vicinity of the gravitational field will be affected by this, thus from an outside perspective, time will appear slowed. Gravitational waves are stronger the closer it is to the source, and gets weaker the farther it is from the source. The outer parts of the galaxy will be less affected by the gravity, and time is also faster in that area. From an outside perspective, all these factors come into play, making the rotation of the galaxy look uniform.
While the core part of the universe is full of celestial objects, and gravity wells, the universe expands faster than light. In the vicinity of the expansion zone of the universe, the edge of the universe likely lacks gravity wells, and is populated with many celestial objects. In fact it’s likely full of the core building blocks of the universe. Time is so much faster in this space, and from our perspective, we will never be able to see it.
The expansion rate of the universe is uniform, but gravity wells slow down time and light. If the universe isn’t in a black hole, the gravity wells will explain why the universe is dark and limit our visibility of the universe. We are in a supercluster, the milky way, the solar system, and on earth. We are in deep layers of gravitational fields, making space look dark with stars visible from our perspective. The spaces where there are minimal gravitational fields, will be bright, which is also the early stages of the universe and the edge of the universe. Time will also flow at crazy faster speeds compared to ours. The fabric of space is still expanding even with these gravitational fields, it’s just that the expansion is perceived at a slower rate in the gravitational well. From the perspective from outside the universe, our universe will seem like a spec of time compared to what the contents of our universe will perceive it as. Time is relative, in and outside the universe, the universe being a black hole. We observe black holes as they explode into existence. Its massive gravitational wave sucks in matter in its gravitational field, and is spit out into the universe within it. Now black holes' lifespan is pretty long in our perspective, and yes it is. The black hole itself has a massive gravitational field, thus slowing time and light. So there comes a paradox of slowed time, where even outside the universe, you will not be able to observe the universe’s lifespan quickly. Even if this is the case, the universe’s time will be flowing faster than the outside perspective, but due to the gravitational field, the perspective’s view is slowed down.
Black holes have a reputation of spaghettifying objects as they enter its gravitational well. That is true from the outside perspective. Since gravitational fields slow down light, and the gravitational field of the black hole gets stronger as it gets closer to the singularity, objects will appear to be in a long stretched shape around the black hole, and that increases as it gets closer to the singularity. Black holes have secretion disks, and that is exactly why. Although this is what’s viewed from the outside perspective, from inside the gravitational well, the object or person if you decide to fly towards the singularity, will be in mostly normal shape from their perspective. There will be distortions too, but not as drastic as viewed from outside the gravity well. If you’re in the gravitational well, and stick a long pole towards the singularity, the pole will seem shorter, and the opposite when pointed the other way. Time will also seem slower in the direction of the singularity and dark, and space outside the black hole will be bright in light and perceived to be faster in time. The trip towards the singularity will be experienced in normal time and would not take millions of years like it would be perceived from outside the gravity well. In the gravity well in deorbit towards the singularity, there will be a paradox of time slowing down in front of the object and time speeding up behind it, as mentioned earlier. While there might be a star that is being stuck in, going into the black hole, you will never get close to it unless the timeframe is close enough. When the object reaches the singularity everything will be dark, no light visible, and all matter will be transferred into the new universe. The new universe’s temperature will be crazily high, like it was at the big bang, meaning all matter entering it will get broken down and become the building blocks of that universe, creating a cycle of infinite universes.
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