Best way is to locate a rotating Black hole and angle your approach to it at a cube root of the asymmetric divergent series as based on ring theory.
When you’ve done that a simple binomial transform will, if you are lucky, enable you to see which of the multiverses are available to you to visit, providing you have a scalable isomorphic transform vector vehicle, capable of internal scalability normals.
Around 13.7 billion years ago, everything we know of was an infinitesimal singularity. Then, according to the Big Bang theory, it burst into action, inflating faster than the speed of light in all directions for a tiny fraction of a second.
Before 10^-32 seconds had passed, the universe had exploded outward to 10^26 times its original size in a process called cosmic inflation.
And that’s all before the actual expansion of matter that we usually think of as the Big Bang itself, which was a consequence of all this inflation: As the inflation slowed, a flood of matter and radiation appeared, creating the classic Big Bang fireball, and began to form the atoms, molecules, stars and galaxies that populate the vastness of space that surrounds us.
That mysterious process of inflation and the Big Bang have convinced some researchers that multiple universes are possible, or even very likely.
According to theoretical physicist Alexander Vilenkin of Tufts University in Massachusetts, inflation didn’t end everywhere at the same time. While it ended for everything that we can detect from Earth 13.8 billion years ago, cosmic inflation in fact continues in other places.
This is called the theory of eternal inflation. And as inflation ends in a particular place, a new bubble universe forms, Vilenkin wrote for Scientific American in 2011.
✁
Vilenkin wrote. “The reason is that intelligent observers exist only in those rare bubbles in which, by pure chance, the constants happen to be just right for life to evolve. The rest of the multiverse remains barren, but no one is there to complain about that.”
It is not possible to test the idea of a multiverse using the scientific method, which makes belief in it an act of faith. And – perhaps ironically – the Hindus came up with it thousands of years ago.
I’m far more interested in the universe 1 minute before the Big Bang. God creating the universe, The Big Bang, Lani and Papa, Ometeotl, or The Great Green Arkleseizure. Most likely the same event. The only provable data is that we are all here.
The binomial transform is a discrete transformation of one sequence into another with many interesting applications in combinatorics and analysis. This volume is helpful to researchers interested in enumerative combinatorics, special numbers, and classical analysis. A valuable reference, it can also be used as lecture notes for a course in binomial identities, binomial transforms and Euler series transformations. The binomial transform leads to various combinatorial and analytical identities involving binomial coefficients. In particular, we present here new binomial identities for Bernoulli, Fibonacci, and harmonic numbers. Many interesting identities can be written as binomial transforms and vice versa.
braindead Premium Member about 3 years ago
Seems like something is bothering Stantis — and it seems like he’s making a serious effort to avoid the issue.
Total guess, but maybe?
Sanspareil about 3 years ago
Best way is to locate a rotating Black hole and angle your approach to it at a cube root of the asymmetric divergent series as based on ring theory.
When you’ve done that a simple binomial transform will, if you are lucky, enable you to see which of the multiverses are available to you to visit, providing you have a scalable isomorphic transform vector vehicle, capable of internal scalability normals.
danketaz Premium Member about 3 years ago
Best way is to sit back and wait for one of those more genius versions of you to come up with a dimensional hopper and visit you.
William Robbins Premium Member about 3 years ago
Meditation. Somewhere around Nirvana, you’ll have the option of visiting other planes. But you won’t.
RobinHood about 3 years ago
Rick Sanchez
nosirrom about 3 years ago
If we only had a Brane.
Silly Season about 3 years ago
Around 13.7 billion years ago, everything we know of was an infinitesimal singularity. Then, according to the Big Bang theory, it burst into action, inflating faster than the speed of light in all directions for a tiny fraction of a second.
Before 10^-32 seconds had passed, the universe had exploded outward to 10^26 times its original size in a process called cosmic inflation.
And that’s all before the actual expansion of matter that we usually think of as the Big Bang itself, which was a consequence of all this inflation: As the inflation slowed, a flood of matter and radiation appeared, creating the classic Big Bang fireball, and began to form the atoms, molecules, stars and galaxies that populate the vastness of space that surrounds us.
That mysterious process of inflation and the Big Bang have convinced some researchers that multiple universes are possible, or even very likely.
According to theoretical physicist Alexander Vilenkin of Tufts University in Massachusetts, inflation didn’t end everywhere at the same time. While it ended for everything that we can detect from Earth 13.8 billion years ago, cosmic inflation in fact continues in other places.
This is called the theory of eternal inflation. And as inflation ends in a particular place, a new bubble universe forms, Vilenkin wrote for Scientific American in 2011.
✁
Vilenkin wrote. “The reason is that intelligent observers exist only in those rare bubbles in which, by pure chance, the constants happen to be just right for life to evolve. The rest of the multiverse remains barren, but no one is there to complain about that.”
~
https://www.space.com/32728-parallel-universes.html
Ignatz Premium Member about 3 years ago
It is not possible to test the idea of a multiverse using the scientific method, which makes belief in it an act of faith. And – perhaps ironically – the Hindus came up with it thousands of years ago.
The Love of Money is . . . about 3 years ago
I’m still trying to image just the alternative universe that Kellyanne Conway lives in. . . holy cow !
RobinHood about 3 years ago
I’m far more interested in the universe 1 minute before the Big Bang. God creating the universe, The Big Bang, Lani and Papa, Ometeotl, or The Great Green Arkleseizure. Most likely the same event. The only provable data is that we are all here.
Radish... about 3 years ago
Right wing fantasy land is a deadly place.
mistercatworks about 3 years ago
It … just … does … not … matter. This is the only world you get.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 3 years ago
Multiple universes not all the same. Rick & Morty play around with it but essentially there are numerous versions of us around entire universes.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 3 years ago
Something I came across.
The binomial transform is a discrete transformation of one sequence into another with many interesting applications in combinatorics and analysis. This volume is helpful to researchers interested in enumerative combinatorics, special numbers, and classical analysis. A valuable reference, it can also be used as lecture notes for a course in binomial identities, binomial transforms and Euler series transformations. The binomial transform leads to various combinatorial and analytical identities involving binomial coefficients. In particular, we present here new binomial identities for Bernoulli, Fibonacci, and harmonic numbers. Many interesting identities can be written as binomial transforms and vice versa.
ChukLitl Premium Member about 3 years ago
Everything possible is out there somewhere, some of it we only think is impossible. Our choices & chances determine a path.