P
PJay_A
Guest
A few weeks ago, an episode of "Into the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman" (a new science series presented by Discovery Channel) aired focused on the subject of "Dark Matter" and "Dark Energy". From my understanding of the program, there has been some recent discoveries shedding some new "light" on our understanding of "Dark Matter". Specifically, that in our Universe where globs of matter (i.e. clusters of galaxies that form interconnecting filaments) dark matter is present immediately outside (kind of like some "invisible skin" holding the filaments of galaxy clusters together). Also mentioned was an observation of two galaxies in collission and the effects of this collission to the galaxies' respective dark matter elements. The ordinary matter's gravity interacted as modern physics could predict, but the dark matter elements had no interaction with the gravity of the other what so ever - passing through one another like ghosts walking through walls. The program offered no explaination for this otherwise physical behavior anomally on the part of dark matter but did say that physicists and cosmologists are "puzzled".
After taking this in, an explanation to the ghost-like interaction of the two bodies of dark matter of the colliding galaxies is obvious if the theories supporting the idea of a greater reality composed of physical dimensions greater than the known three are correct. Simply put, dark matter is matter existing outside our 3D "hemisphere" (or "brane" - as "M Theory" supporters would call it), which is why we can't see and why we do feel gravity from it. The two galaxies' colliding dark matter may appear to us as if they are passing through one another like ghosts because they share three dimensional coordinates with one another which happen to be the same three dimensions that exists within our dimensional visible “sphere” (or “brane” according to “M Theory”). The dark matter from either galaxy (according to my thinking) would not share the same fourth dimensional coordinates while appearing (to us) to pass through each other like ghosts. The two bodies of dark matter could be separated (on the fourth dimensional plane) so that their distance from one another could explain the lack of gravity interaction between masses of dark matter of the colliding galaxies.
After thinking this, I was curious if “M Theory” explains dark matter similar to my thoughts in the above paragraph. I looked it up. They do have an extra-dimensional explanation for dark matter. But their theory is completely different to what I am proposing and completely outlandish. They’re stand is that dark matter exists in bubble parallel multiverses that are so close to our universe where effects of gravity from these parallel multiverses can be seen and felt on us.
I disagree with “M Theory” on this, specifically the part about bubble parallel multiverses as the containment for dark matter. If “M Theory” was correct (concerning their explanation of dark matter), dark matter would appear rather randomly; it would not have the organization that it is now known to have, an organization and pattern directly related to the Universe’ patterns of filaments of galaxy clusters.
I thought that maybe dark matter is the fourth dimension of all visible matter. But for this to be correct, it would have to occupy the same 3D space as visible matter (it exists “outside” visible matter in 3D). Then it hit me and I think I could explain why this is, but first I have to talk about time.
I often wondered that if time is the fourth dimension (as proposed by Einstein), then why do we not feel the effects of gravity from the past and future on the present? I’ve worked out in my head that time is an effect of invisible dimensions in our 3D world and not a dimension in itself. If it were, then why does it have properties different than the special dimensions? Our 3D space is constantly being replaced with new 3D space at time’s ticking. New 3D space unfolds from invisible dimensions at each replacement (we see this as expansion). The 3D space from the future and the past are always nearby, but are offset four dimensionally (hence, the matter residing from these 3D spaces are not visible to us).
Even if I am wrong with my thinking concerning the concept of time, if the Universe expands then space never is in the same place. Space must move with expansion at the speed of expansion; therefore, the mass from the future will not be the same “place” as the present or past. This explains why gravity from one “time” is interacting with mass from any before or after time.
Future mass will surround current mass because of its movement with space as a result of expansion. It is this future mass in the form of current mass measured 4-dimensionally that I think could be this stuff we call “dark matter”!
After taking this in, an explanation to the ghost-like interaction of the two bodies of dark matter of the colliding galaxies is obvious if the theories supporting the idea of a greater reality composed of physical dimensions greater than the known three are correct. Simply put, dark matter is matter existing outside our 3D "hemisphere" (or "brane" - as "M Theory" supporters would call it), which is why we can't see and why we do feel gravity from it. The two galaxies' colliding dark matter may appear to us as if they are passing through one another like ghosts because they share three dimensional coordinates with one another which happen to be the same three dimensions that exists within our dimensional visible “sphere” (or “brane” according to “M Theory”). The dark matter from either galaxy (according to my thinking) would not share the same fourth dimensional coordinates while appearing (to us) to pass through each other like ghosts. The two bodies of dark matter could be separated (on the fourth dimensional plane) so that their distance from one another could explain the lack of gravity interaction between masses of dark matter of the colliding galaxies.
After thinking this, I was curious if “M Theory” explains dark matter similar to my thoughts in the above paragraph. I looked it up. They do have an extra-dimensional explanation for dark matter. But their theory is completely different to what I am proposing and completely outlandish. They’re stand is that dark matter exists in bubble parallel multiverses that are so close to our universe where effects of gravity from these parallel multiverses can be seen and felt on us.
I disagree with “M Theory” on this, specifically the part about bubble parallel multiverses as the containment for dark matter. If “M Theory” was correct (concerning their explanation of dark matter), dark matter would appear rather randomly; it would not have the organization that it is now known to have, an organization and pattern directly related to the Universe’ patterns of filaments of galaxy clusters.
I thought that maybe dark matter is the fourth dimension of all visible matter. But for this to be correct, it would have to occupy the same 3D space as visible matter (it exists “outside” visible matter in 3D). Then it hit me and I think I could explain why this is, but first I have to talk about time.
I often wondered that if time is the fourth dimension (as proposed by Einstein), then why do we not feel the effects of gravity from the past and future on the present? I’ve worked out in my head that time is an effect of invisible dimensions in our 3D world and not a dimension in itself. If it were, then why does it have properties different than the special dimensions? Our 3D space is constantly being replaced with new 3D space at time’s ticking. New 3D space unfolds from invisible dimensions at each replacement (we see this as expansion). The 3D space from the future and the past are always nearby, but are offset four dimensionally (hence, the matter residing from these 3D spaces are not visible to us).
Even if I am wrong with my thinking concerning the concept of time, if the Universe expands then space never is in the same place. Space must move with expansion at the speed of expansion; therefore, the mass from the future will not be the same “place” as the present or past. This explains why gravity from one “time” is interacting with mass from any before or after time.
Future mass will surround current mass because of its movement with space as a result of expansion. It is this future mass in the form of current mass measured 4-dimensionally that I think could be this stuff we call “dark matter”!