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My hypothesis is that the time domain has its own 3 spatial dimensions because it contains electrons which are bariyonic matter. so in reality ours is a 6 dimensional existence.
originally posted by: swanne
originally posted by: Nochzwei
a reply to: swanne
yes but the electron compression in the time domain is enormous imo
Normal electrons already exist in the time domain. All normal particles already have a velocity, which is a four-dimensional vector (3 space + 1 time). Otherwise particles would have zero existence in Time.
There is one particle which might exist in zero time, the tachyon, but its existence is highly contreversial and it has never been observed.
My experimental result shows time domain to contain barayonic matter, so it has got to have its own 3 spatial dimensions which intersect our 3 spatial dimensions at right angles. segreggating the voltages ( both are at right angles to each other ) out of these 2 domains enables you to measure the current flow out of the time domain. so far i have got only electrons out of the time domain, which i hypothesize to be dark matter.
originally posted by: swanne
a reply to: Nochzwei
Interesting hypothesis.
However you might be over-thinking the time domain. The dimension of Time (singular as it is usually defined) is already placed at right angles from all space dimensions. If your purpose is simply to ensure that the content of Time be at right angles from spaces, then making Time a 3-dimensional system might be kind of redundant.
I personally worked with a hypothesis involving two dimensions of Time (to solve time travel paradox), but this other dimension of time wouldn't really store massive, exotic matter - it would just act as additional room for the usual dimension of time to bend freely.