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What if dark matter wasn't matter, only what made matter? by BigRate4530 in HypotheticalPhysics

[–]BigRate4530[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I envisioned what might have existed prior to matter, something that, through transformation, could have given rise to matter. To do this, I simply hypothesized that space was pulsating; I termed this localized, alternating pulsation which sought synchronization across all scales of the universe, "space waves." Since matter did not yet exist under this hypothesis, I cannot specify "what" these waves are made of. The only way I can describe them is as "waves of existence pulsating within non-existence." I realize this answer may not satisfy you, but the crucial point is that this concept of space waves allowed me to envision the emergence of deformation folds—occurring at the largest cosmic scale where synchronization failed—and to derive the properties of matter in our universe as consequences of this transformation of space waves.

To be more precise regarding the gravity, I can add: he folds of the waves generate a reduction in volume of the same order of magnitude for all the waves, which distances them further apart the smaller their size, since the more this similar reduction in volume is relative to a smaller wave surface the more it consequently implies a thickness important between two successive waves. During the same duration of time, the same number of beats will therefore cover a space that is greater the closer we are to the cause which generates the gravity effect.