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The subspace view of the universe

December 17 2008 at 12:54 PM
David Butterworth 

 
Back in 1999 I submitted to this site a different description of the universe. After my retirement I went back and updated this document and showed how this model ties back to Newtons, Einsteins, Schrödingers, Diracs and Maxwells Laws, Theories and Equations.
Walter has been kind enough to allow me to advertise this beta-version book ($5 download) on the main page to this site. The book preview is now working.
What I am looking for is a discussion on this new approach where I describe spinning singularities as the architects of the universe, building space and time between particles. The underlining theme of this book is that existence connects all things; a relatively simple concept but one that is not the center of current scientific thinking.
I showed that dark matter exists as single singularity and matter, anti-matter exists as two or more singularities locked together. All of the forces of electromagnetic attraction-repulsion and gravity are explained by these singularities. Any thoughts?

 
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The subspace view of the universe

December 19 2008, 5:12 AM 

Dave; You have a well developed imagination. How would one go to sub-space to prove your concept?

 
 
David Butterworth

Re: The subspace view of the universe

December 19 2008, 2:16 PM 

One must be careful, you could get lost in a subspace. It is infinitely large on the insides and the way to get out is very small. My best proof that I could come up with is the model's agreement with Newtons, Einsteins, Schrödingers, Diracs and Maxwells Laws, Theories and Equations. As a side note, the universe itself may be a very large subspace and we are far enough away from the singularity so the space appears flat. That would mean that the outer edges of the universe would be very small and in fact may only be one point. That may help explain why the temperature around the universe is so uniform, the further we look out into the universe the smaller it is. It would help when we do space travel, it would give us a nice superhighway around the universe. Just stay away from the middle.

 
 
David Butterworth

Making the information obtainable

December 21 2008, 7:54 PM 

I made a web site that should be accessable in a few days called subspaceuniverse

 
 

Making the information obtainable

January 5 2009, 1:07 AM 

The CMB is a local phenomenon, caused by the plasma surrounding the Sun. Check out the web sites on the plasma universe. It is not smooth. That is the problem.

 
 

Re: The subspace view of the universe

April 15 2009, 12:24 AM 

The subspaceuniverse.com site is up.

 
 
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