Universe


Related: Future of Mankind

No beginning, no end.

Get smaller for infinity. Get bigger for infinity.

Can matter move faster than the speed of light?

Things tend to move in waves: sound, water, light, heat.

Matter made of electron, proton, neutron.

Electron and proton pull each other closer.

All objects have gravity the farther away you look, the farther into the past you see.

Heat can get hotter for infinity.

Things tend to take a circular shape. Planets and stars sphere. Orbits ellipse.

How much mass would an object need for gravity to equal

Everything, whether in motion or not, has energy called gravity, maybe gravity is the force protons from one atom have on electrons from another atom and vice versa.

Kinds of energy are: heat, static, electricity, gravity, magnetism, solar power, sound, light waves, wind, hydro, nuclear.

We use oxygen and emit carbon dioxide, plants use carbon dioxide and emit oxygen, so maybe they can power things like cars with a two engine system where each one uses each others waste.

On earth, the farther away you look into space the farther back in time you see.

If you look at the sun, the events that happen are eight minutes or eight seconds ago the events that happen are not what is really happening at that instant what you see is the visible spectrum, the light waves that travel three or six hundred thousand miles a second

They put a clock in an airplane and flew it around and the time was slower than the clock on earth.

Black holes bend light waves into it.

Gravity can transform mass into energy by the more mass an object has it will be more likely to squeeze itself into an explosion.

Gravity is an attractive force that pulls things as is opposite magnetic forces attract each other. Since it takes time for light waves to travel we could look back into time if we could travel to a distance light years away from out planet in a very short period of time, like teleportation. Then, if we could zoom in on earth with a super telescope, we would be looking back in time; it doesn't mean we could go back in time if we went faster than the speed of light. It just means we would be seeing events. Where do light waves come from? Are they a form of energy or do they have weight? They have to have weight because gravity, a force, can have an effect on it by pulling it. Things that seem to be infinite: speed, space, size (how small or big some things can get), the events in time (when was there a first event/ will there be a final event), numbers, do events somehow run in a continuous loop? A physical, interactive world, with infinities where did the matter come from? Sound is waves, light is waves why are they waves, why not straight lines, or spirals or something? What if acceleration of gravity was greater than or equal to the speed of light? Human wonders: time travel, immortality, cloning, DNA mixing, nanotechnology, how could humans become immortal? Forms of energy: sound waves, light, nuclear, wind, electric, plasma? How are planets attracted to each other how does gravity pull them together? Protons and electrons pull toward each other how do protons and neutrons stick together? The universe is something many people take for granted. I don't know if most people ever stop and take the time to realize how interesting the universe is. Most people are too wrapped up in their own problems to really think about the universe.

Quarks, neutrinos, and others make up protons and neutrons.

What if two planets traveling at just over half the speed of light hit each other head on? The collision of the impact would be greater than the speed of light.

Infinities: time, speed, size, numbers, temperature.

The hotter things get the faster things move, so as temperature increases speed increases and vice versa. If planets were frozen like ice cubes would they have less gravitational attraction than two suns of same mass when something is spinning, there is a force that pushes that object out, as mass increases gravity increases, as energy increases speed increases. Does light travel slower in cold conditions? As distance increases light takes longer to reach the other side, thus farther back in time things are seen. Sound waves consist of small, rapid changes in temperature as well as variations in pressure. Thermoacoustic chillers harness temperature oscillations. Is there a link between electromagnetic fields and gravitational force? What I know is that the world in which we live in is not real. Nothing is real. Mainly because I know there is no beginning or end to time and there is no limit to the amount of space there can be between two objects.

What is time?

If everything was absolutely still, there was absolutely no motion, would there be time?

Zero motion means zero energy?

Energy and matter, E = mc2

Relativity

Einstein’s out of the box thinking

One unifying theory of everything, which links everything together

Gravity

We need to see the big picture. Each human interprets their surroundings in a different way, each generating a unique perspective on different views. But all of us should agree that we are coexisting together on this sphere in the middle of a possibly infinitely spanning universe. We all need to acknowledge that there must be some sort of higher force, in one form or another. As time must stretch for infinity, there must not be a beginning nor an end. But how could this exist, without a beginning. How can we spontaneously exist? How can we come from nothing?



This dimension we exist in is a trick, a game, a puzzle, and or an illusion. Time is like a fluid? A light is turned on. Then it is turned off. A light must be on before it can be turned off.


universe functions properties

time - space/size - temperature - pressure - speed - gravity - density

units
====
length
velocity
acceleration
volume
mass
heat/work

time extends for infinity in both ways

space/size extend for infinity in both ways

temperature ranges from 0 to infinity

pressure ranges from 0 to infinity

speed ranges from 0 to infinity

gravity ranges from 0 to infinity

density ranges from 0 to infinity?

within a given volume, density can be zero, where there is no mass within the volume but,
there should be a maximum allowable density, to where if density reaches beyond a specific point, gravity causes it to convert to energy

if you have 0 density, you have 0 temperature because there is nothing to take the temperature from

keeping volume constant - the more dense an object is, the greater the mass, and the greater the gravity, and also the greater the temperature, greater the speed of the atoms and speed of gravity

letting volume increase with increase in mass - an object will continue to become more dense at its core

light, time, waves

light, like matter, takes time to travel, and like matter, travels at a particular speed
how do we experience time?

why do things tend to take elliptical paths, or circular ones?

why does the sun rotate?
why do the planets go around the sun?
why do the planets spin?
why does the moon orbit the earth?
and the moon spins?
what causes spiral galaxies like the milky way?


Universe and science thinking


Say you have n number of particle points which represent a system. This system is open to the surroundings. The particles all have a specific heat. The closer the particles are to each other, the slower heat from the system is lost to the surroundings. But as the particles begin to move apart, more and more heat is lost from the system to the surroundings. But if there is no matter in the surroundings, i.e. if there is no surroundings then where does the heat go.

This system represents the universe and the particles represent suns. Now if the universe is expanding then the universe will be losing more and more heat.


Typical motions

Spiral, like spiral galaxy
Straight line
Wavy straight, like light waves, sound waves, electromagnetic spectrum
Circular, like rotations, spins of planets, stars, electrons
Elliptical, like orbits of planets, orbits of electrons, orbits of solar systems in a galaxy
Arced, curved

Shapes
Spherical, like particles, planets

Root properties
Distance
Mass
Temperature

Dependent properties
Gravity, acceleration
Velocity
Force
Pressure
Time

When temperature increases, distance increases


Without motion, there is no time
Without distance, there is no motion


Time and Space

If you think about time it seems like there can be only two possibilities, 1, there was some initial point where time began or 2, time simply runs for infinity. If you think about space or volume it seems like there can be only two possibilities, 1, there is some sort of barrier to the universe, where nothing exists beyond it and beyond it nothing is or 2, space extends for infinity. From this it seems that there should be some sort of relationship with these postulates to the limit as some variable goes to 0 and the limit as some variable goes to infinity.


Trying to Define Time According to Dictionary

Time as defined by the dictionary

Time – 1. the system of those sequential relations that any event has to any other, as past, present, or future; indefinite and continuous duration regarded as that in which events succeed one another 2. duration regarded as belonging to the present life as distinct from the life to come or from eternity; finite duration.

Sequential – 1. characterized by a regular sequence of parts. 2. following; subsequent; consequent

Sequence – 1. the following of one thing after another; succession. 2. something that follows; a subsequent event; result; consequence.

Succession – 1. the coming of one person or thing after another in order, sequence, or in the course of events 2. a number of persons or things following one another in order or sequence.

After – 1. behind in place or position 2. later in time than; in succession to; at the close of 3. subsequent to

Before – 1. in time preceding; previously 2. earlier or sooner 3. previous to, earlier than

Present – 1. being, existing, or occurring at this time or now

Previous – 1. coming or occurring before something else; prior

Past – 1. gone by or elapsed in time 2. of, having existed in, or having occurred in a time previous to the present; bygone 3. gone by just before the present time; just passed

Future – 1. time that is to be or come hereafter 2. that which will exist or happen in future time

Basically, all words that have to do with time are all used to define each other, so there is no real explanation of time.


Time Does Not Exist

Time is dependent on motion. For there to be time, there has to be motion. The only way to measure time, is in using motion, or movement. If everything were completely static, motionless, down to atoms and beyond, then there would be no time. There must also be beings to recognize movement, and therefore, time, for there to be time.

Time is relative
Relative to what?
Motion.
Without motion, there can be no time.
Time is measured by devices through which motion occurs, even if that motion is that of electrons.
If everything is completely static, light, atoms, etc. then time does not exist?
What is motion?
Motion involves displacement
But, displacement is also relative
Displacement is measured with respect to a reference object. (the observer)
If a ball moves left, towards a box, while the observer and box remain in place, then to the observer, the ball has moved. But if the ball moves to the left, towards the box and the observer moves at the exact rate as the ball, then it appears to the observer as though the box has moved towards the ball.
Therefore, motion is relative to the observer.
Motion is dependent upon the observer.


Reflecting on Existence, thinking about Universe

Look at the world that surrounds you. Realize that we exist in a place that does not make sense. Time is merely a means of keeping an order of events that occur in space. How could there be a first event of which there was never an event that preceded it, a very first event. For there to be an event there has to be substance. If there is an empty vacuum there are no events occurring.

This matter, where did it all come from, infinity?

We are here, but this is unreal.

Idea, if there is a control volume where the control volume consists only of a complete vacuum, is there time?

Idea, only if there is motion is there time?

Idea, if everything was completely frozen absolutely solid, down to the smallest piece of matter, everything was absolutely stationary besides a clock. And that clock was measuring time, what would the time measured be in reference to but itself?

Perhaps the clock was measuring the time it took for everything to be absolutely stationary, but if it is forever stationary, then the clock does not reference everything around it.

Idea, for there to be time, there must be motion.


Everything is Fractals