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A Theory Regarding the Origins of the Universe Or The Universe is a Hypertorus

Paper 1 of 2

Nathan R. D. Haslewood 15th November 2010

The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

When we look into the big bang what we see is this. However, we only see half of what is truly happening. The universe we have traditionally though of is only half of the true universe.

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

There are two sides to the universe. The side of the universe we are in holds itself in a balance with an equal and opposite inverted mirror side of the universe. Each of these sides of the universe is constantly moving, flowing from and into the other. The shape shown below is a torus. Our universe is eternally, infinity, cyclically flowing in 5 dimensional space. Our universe is a hypertorus.

The mirror or negative side of the universe (contracting).

Our side of the universe (expanding).

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

There is a point at which the two sides of the universe meet. On the negative side of the universe, this point is the centre of a black hole. On our side it is the centre of a white hole. This point is the point of equilibrium and inversion. It is the point of gravitational and spacetime collapse. As the flow falls down the vortex towards the null point of equilibrium at the centre of the universe it gets faster and faster. As the vortex spins faster and faster, it eventually compresses down to the point where it has nowhere to go but out again. After this the flows begins to expand.

The mirror side of the universe (contracting).

Black hole. Point of equilibrium and inversion. Point of gravitational and spacetime collapse. White hole. Big bang occurs on our side of the point of inversion. Our side of the universe (expanding).

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

So when we look into the big bang we think we see this:

When in reality we are seeing this:

Where we are looking from. Into the centre of a white hole.


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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

However, we are only able to see half of the whole picture. The mirror side of the universe is, by its nature, unobservable to us. It is on the other side of a bridge which is currently uncrossable.

We are somewhere here

Time is expansionary on this side.

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

We therefore unknowingly ignore this, simultaneously occurring in the inverted side of the universe.

Imagining we could look into a black hole in the inverse universe.

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

Mass, energy, time, space, expansity (expansionary momentum, dark energy, the accelerating expansion effect, or gravitational replusion) and gravity (vacuum energy) all reach null at both the centre and horizon.

Point of equilibrium. Opposing forces are strongest. Cause each other i.e. they invert.

Horizon. Opposing forces are weakest. Cancel each other out i.e. they invert.

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

Our side of the universe = the flow spilling out of the vortex from the null point at the very centre. The flow includes space, time, mass, and energy. The true nature of this cannot be shown with 3 dimensional models such as the one below. To grasp this concept you have to think outside of normal 4 dimensional experience - the three spatial dimensions, plus time (the fourth dimension).

The 4-dimensional space of our universe exists within this area. The true nature of this cannot be shown with 3D models such as this one.

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

To grasp this concept you have to conceptualise the universe flowing out and back into itself in 5 dimensional space. Time is not linear going forward but is, in fact, expansionary. The same is true with space. Mass and energy, gravity (vacuum energy) and expansity (expansionary momentum) are also contractionary and expansionary forces respectively. This are discussed more in paper 2 of 2.

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

Because we exist in a purely 4 dimensional environment, all that is observable in the origin of our universe is a rapidly expanding sphere essentially an explosion in 4 dimensions (shown below in 3 dimensions).

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

What is missing from the explanation is a simultaneous and equal implosion occurring on the opposite, inverted, collapsing side of the universe. This is a rapidly shrinking sphere essentially an implosion in 4 dimensions. The point at which the implosion ends is the same point as the centre of the explosion in our expansionary universe.

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The Universe is a Hypertorus | Nathan R. D. Haslewood | Nov 2010

The centre of the explosion in our universe and the centre of the implosion in the negative universe where they meet as the joining of two inverse sides of the true universe - is the point of equilibrium and inversion. Time and space are included in the inversion.

Explosion in our side of the universe (big bang) and implosion in inverted side of the universe meet here.

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