What If We Could Open a Portal to a Parallel Universe?

 


What if there are other universes like ours? With an infinite number of lands?



With your multiple versions? What if we didn't have to look far to find them?

Perhaps a mirror version of our reality Our Universe Our universe began when a small but extremely hot singularity exploded in the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago.

But perhaps it was not the only one born at that time.

In physics, space and time merge into a four-dimensional continuum, and if this space-time is flat and extends far beyond the limits of our observation, there are likely to be countless heterogeneous universes.

But we all know that these other universes have limited ways of holding particles together.

At some point the facts will start repeating themselves.


This means, in theory, our reality is only a small fraction of what's out there, and someone like you could live in a parallel universe like ours.


And that universe could be about a million trillion trillionths of a centimeter away.


Neutrons Although the wall between universes may be incredibly small, traveling between them will not be easy. But it could be done.

All you need is an 85 megawatt nuclear reactor capable of firing billions of neutrons on command.

Thus, a team of physicists working at the Oak Ridge Laboratory in Tennessee is trying to open the doors of the mirror universe.

Of course, they have to find him first. It all comes from a theory that says, if you beam a neutron at a wall, nobody should go through it.


If some people manage to make it to the other side, it would mean that they have been transformed into their own reflection, passing through the wall between the two worlds.

There is a strange thing about neutrons. In a particle beam, on average, they last 14 minutes and 48 seconds before becoming protons.

But if you put neutrons in a lab bottle, they will decay faster than 10 seconds. It's not something we can explain with physics right now.

Neutrons are all the same, and their lifetimes should not differ by 10 seconds, no matter where they are stored.

Is it possible that the neutron experiments did not go as expected because physicists accidentally opened a portal to the mirror world?


The mirror universe will be the first evidence that the mirror universe exists very close to us. A mirror world with mirror atoms, perhaps even a mirror Earth.

An entire mirror world is almost completely cut off from us.

Can you meet other versions of yourself in this mirror world? Now it gets a little complicated. Although particle configurations can repeat themselves, the odds of finding a portal to a perfectly parallel universe like ours are close to zero. think about it.


There are one novemvigintillion particles in the universe. It is the number 1 followed by 90 zeros.

Each of them would need to interact equally for 13.7 billion years to create a universe like ours. A mirror universe would likely have its own constitutive laws of physics.

But it's hard to know for sure, because no one has yet detected a single mirror particle. Maybe, we shouldn't look for the answer in the laboratory.


Perhaps we should search in space itself. Dark Matter Our universe is full of dark matter.

We can't observe it directly, and we don't know what it's made of or how it works, but... we know dark matter is strong enough to blow up galaxies.

Still, we can't find it. Perhaps this is because dark matter is coming into us from the mirror world. If we can detect it, it will confirm that a mirror universe exists.

Because we know that there is five times more dark matter than visible matter in the universe, you have to think that the mirror universe is much bigger than the one we live in.

In another world, the portal would be incredibly small. You can see anything without the most powerful lab equipment.

We'll still be dealing with neutrons and protons, remember? You can enter this realm only if you have the ability to shrink yourself down to the size of an atom.

But that's a story for someone else if.


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