“When the rational and acausal tendencies inherent in time may again reverse their positions of dominance. Time, like light, may best be described as a union of opposites. Time may be both wave and, ultimately, particle, each in some sense a reflection of the other. The same holographic properties that have long been an accepted part of the phenomenon of the perception of three-dimensional space also suggest that interference patterns are characteristic of process. Living beings especially illustrate this. We don’t think about time because we take it for granted like breathing…”
“Although special relativity makes some quantities relative, such as time, that we would have imagined to be absolute based on everyday experience, it also makes absolute some others that we would have thought were relative. In particular, it states that the speed of light is the same for all observers, even if they are in motion relative to one another.”
Special Relativity – Albert EinsteiN
Our universe is sliding steadily in a specific direction, in what researchers are calling "the dark flow."
Some suspect the flow is caused by the pull of gravity from another universe.
One way to detect the flow is seeing how galaxy clusters scatter radiation left over from the Big Bang.
The universe is not only expanding -- it's being swept along in the direction of constellations Centaurus and Hydra at a steady clip of one million miles per hour, pulled, perhaps, by the gravity of another universe.
Scientists have no idea what's tugging at the known world, except to say that whatever it is likely dates back to the fraction of the second between the universe's explosive birth 13.7 billion years ago and its inflation a split second later.
"At this point we don't have enough information to see what it is, or to constrain it. We can only say with certainty that somewhere very far away the world is very different than what we see locally. Whether it's 'another universe' or a different fabric of space-time we don't know,"
Alexander Kashlinsky at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
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