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Showing posts from January 28, 2025

Simplifing Gravity.

In my model, gravity (represented by G G ) isn’t a fundamental force. Instead, it actually emerges from the interactions of temporal flows . Think of these flows as the very building blocks of everything. They interact with each other, and those interactions create the curvature of space, which we experience as gravity. Let me break it down for you. Imagine two temporal flows at points A A  and B B , with magnitudes F A F_A ​ and F B F_B ​ . When these flows interact, the strength of the interaction depends on how "big" they are and how far apart they are. The strength of their interaction is roughly the product of their magnitudes, F A × F B F_A \times F_B ​ , and the curvature (or the warping of space) they create decreases as you move farther away. So, the curvature between the two flows can be written as: Curvature ∼ F A × F B r 2 \text{Curvature} \sim \frac{F_A \times F_B}{r^2} ​ ​ Here, r r  is the distance between the two flows. This curvature is what gives rise to gr...

Rethinking Spacetime Dimensionality

Rethinking Spacetime Dimensionality A New Perspective on Matrix Representations 1. Traditional View vs. New Approach Traditional View In classical physics, spacetime is often represented as a four-dimensional structure using the Minkowski matrix , where space and time are treated as separate dimensions. This model requires complex transformations, such as Lorentz transformations, to account for relativistic effects like time dilation and length contraction. Spacetime traditionally depicted as a 4x4 Minkowski matrix Time is viewed as a separate, distinct dimension Requires complex mathematical tools for relativistic effects Proposed Alternative I propose a new way of thinking about spacetime—starting from a fundamental 1x1 matrix and gradually expanding it into a more complex structure. In this view, time is not a separate dimension but a global transformation factor that influences the spatial structure. Start with a 1x1 fundamental matrix Space naturally expands into a 3x3 matrix Tim...