Hawking Forum Post 30922


Subject: 7-Dimensional Einsteinian Hyperspherical Universe URL now available
Date: August 02, 2000 at 15:22:10
Poster: Samuel A. (Sam) Cox

Hello: Dr. Hawking has considered the parallel universe concept for years. He has entertained the possibility of a simple dual universe, and also evaluated a concept embodying an infinite number of parallel universes.

A URL in plain English is now available explaining the structure of the least complex, simple, quasi-static, dual geometric universe model, based on S7: space in seven large dimensions with a Schwarzschild two/sphere geometry, and a single, single process time dimension.

Field observations before World War II by Jan Oort of our galactic arm and more recent observations of distant galaxies, demand additional baryonic matter and non-baryonic dark energy in large amounts, in this model...microscopic singularity.

A suppressed second peak in the power spectrum of the CBR in recent detailed experiments is widely interpreted to indicate twice the Baryonic, or atomic matter in the universe than we observe. Yet this other half of the atomic matter in the universe is invisible- why? Scientists are busy trying to detect additional matter in more conventional ways, but the 7D "simple" dual universe fully explains this and many other counterintuitive observations made at the smallest and largest scales of the universe.

All scientific concepts start with a vision. This vision is the quest of the human mind to explain unexplained phenomena and understand our existence. Science seeks rational answers. Scientists put their visions to rigorous tests of conceptual consistency, mathematical analysis, and observational verification. The Seven Dimensional (and up...any mathematician knows why the author includes "and up") Einsteinian Hyperspherical Universe...a geometric concept, makes science fiction look tame in its implications yet it FITS the observations, and fits them very well. The address of the URL is:

http://www.fm/7-sphere

Best Wishes, Sam Cox

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© 2000 Samuel Cox