Hmmm, interesting. Got a link?I saw a very interesting idea floated around on a video once on Youtube. I don't know enough about the topic to know if it matches up with current explanations at all.. but I thought it was a pretty cool theory.
The idea was along the lines of multi-verses and that in our universe space is 3-dimensional and time is 1-dimensional. Matter in our universe travels space and never pre-occupies the same point in time. In the opposite of this universe is 3-dimensional time and 1-dimensional space. Where matter travels time and never pre-occupies more than one point in space.
They created a simulation of this opposite universe where essentially space is like a stack of papers and matter moving through the stack was 3-dimensional time... wherever matter existed before at any layer of space left a trace - a slice of its sub-section (an atom's location observable in 3-dimensional time). As matter in our universe moves into an area of space occupied in the other universe at a different point in time.. it causes a natural resistance as atoms penetrate these layers of time in the opposite universe... giving us unusual properties of physics that we associate to dark matter.
They then attempted to explain this is why there is no true "solid" aspect in this universe... that atoms are displaced by other matter in time. Through the interactions of matter between both universes causes their to be a connection of all atoms to every other atom in this universe.
Vortices overcome this resistance.. which allows for the formation of galaxies and systems of planets/stars down to electrons of the atom. However, the expansion of the universe and the movement of galaxies is impacted by this resistance, causing it to travel paths of least resistance, which causes spatial displacement and speed deviations that explain how galaxies and stars might collide in a perfectly expanding universe.
There were many more complex ideas to this... and my explanation of that theory is fairly juvenile. I thought it paired well with what I've read on more accepted quantum theories.
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