Law of the Universe

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In physics, the Law of the Universe is a theoretical equation which extremely simplifies the ingredients of the mechanics involved in the first moments of the Big Bang.

The definition of the event as a vortex of energy is now accepted even in the representation of the photon which has been historically seen as the movement of orthogonal waves for its physycs is still bound to the wave rather than the corpuscolar entity. Because the modern quantization of the reality is producing an increasingly amount of quantum numbers, the points of view in the Hilbert space increase too. If the Occam Razor[1] is valid then a more simple representation of the quantum mechanics is possible.

In a pure perspective the intrinsec movement of an event in the space is admittable only accepting the existence of the absolute empty, the NOT[2], which is part of the formula. The crashing of the Symmetry virtually mathematized reaching the center of the Singularity from the poles whose limit existence is verified through the diversity of the reality itself.

Light speed is always constant so the photon can be viewed as unitary space per unitary time; so spacetime, rather than being a grid in the Universe, is a property of the matter itself. The Planck time creates volumes and results in matter as combination of energy forms. The granularity is mantained in huge stars and, excluding black holes[3], this garantees stability at all states of matter.






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References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ockham's Theory of Terms". Goodreads. Retrieved 2017-08-31. 
  2. ^ Brambilla, Mauro (2014). "GUT, The Law of the Universe". 
  3. ^ Hawking, Stephen (2011). Dal big bang ai buchi neri. Breve storia del tempo (in Italian). Bur. ISBN 9788817050180. 
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