Parallel Universe - Gateway To Universes | True Or False?

What if
nearby another world, fair similar to ours? With an infinite number of
Earths? With uncountable versions of you?
Maybe a mirror version of our reality Our Universe began when a small, but very hot singularity exploded in the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago.
Maybe a mirror version of our reality Our Universe began when a small, but very hot singularity exploded in the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago.
But
maybe it wasn't the only one to be born then. In physics, space and time fuse
into one four-dimensional continuum, If this space-time is flat and stretches
far,
Elsewhere the bounds of our remark, there is an option that it grips countless detached universes.
WAYS TO PUT TOGETHER UNIVERSES | PARALLEL UNIVERSE
But for
all we know, there are a limited number of ways the particles in those other
universes can be put together. At some point, the realities will have to start
repeating themselves.
That means, in theory, our reality is only a small part of what's out there, and someone just like you might be living in a parallel universe similar to our own. And that universe may be as close as a million trillion trillionth of a centimeter away.
Though
the partition among the worlds might be extremely minor, migrants among them
won't be informal. But it could be done. All you'd need is an 85-megawatt
nuclear reactor capable of firing billions of neutrons on command.

PHYSICISTS WORKING ON IT? | PARALLEL UNIVERSE
That's
how a team of physicists, working in Tennessee's Oak Ridge Laboratory, are
trying to open the gates of a mirror universe. Of course,
They
have to find it first. It all comes from a theory that says, if you beam
neutrons at a wall, none should pass through.
If some
do manage to make it to the other side, it would mean that they've transformed into
mirror images of themselves as they went through the wall between the two
worlds. There is one odd thing about neutrons.
In particle beams, on average, they last for 14 minutes and 48 seconds before they decay into protons. But if you place neutrons in a lab bottle, they'll break down 10 seconds faster.
It's
not somewhat we can clarify by physics up till now. Neutrons are all the same, and
there shouldn't be any 10-second difference in their lifespan, regardless of
where they are stored.
GATEWAY TO PARALLEL WORLD | PARALLEL UNIVERSE
Could
it is likely that the neutron trials didn't go as predictable for the reason
that physicists unintentionally opened a gateway to a parallel world?

That
would be the first indication that a parallel world subsists right subsequent
to our own. A parallel universe with mirror atoms, perhaps even a parallel Earth.
A whole parallel world nearly totally cut-off as of ours.
ENCOUNTER ADDITIONAL VERSION OF YOURSELF? | PARALLEL UNIVERSE
Could
you encounter extra form of yourself in that parallel world? Now it gets a
little complicated.
Even
though particle configurations can repeat themselves, the odds of finding a
portal to a parallel universe that's exactly the same as ours are close to
zero.
Think about it. There are a novemvigintillion particles in the Universe. That's the number 1 followed by 90 zeros.
Each
single one of them would need to, have had similar connections for 13.7
billion centuries to make an indistinguishable universe to what we have currently.
PARALLEL LAWS OF PHYSICS? | PARALLEL UNIVERSE
The parallel
universe would most probably have its individual parallel laws of physical
science. But it's hard to know for sure,
Because
nobody's detected a single mirror particle yet. Maybe, we shouldn't be
searching for answers in a lab.

Perhaps
we should be looking in space itself. Our Universe is full of dark matter. We
can't observe it directly, and we have no idea what it's made of or how it
works, but,
WE KNOW THAT
Dark substance is robust sufficient to halt galaxies as of hovering separately. Yet, we can't find it. Perhaps the reason is that dark matter is leaking from a mirror world into ours. If we could detect that,
CONCLUSION
It would
settle that a parallel universe exists. Because we know that there is five
times more dark matter than there is visible matter in the Universe, you've got
to think that a mirror universe is much more massive than the one we live in.

Even if we did manage to open up a gate into another world, the portal would be incredibly small — too small for you to see anything without some very powerful lab equipment.
We'd
still, be dealing with neutrons and protons, remember? You could only enter that
realm if you had the ability to shrink yourself to the size of an atom.