Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Is there unquantized empty space?

The behavior of bubbles makes sense if flat space is non existent. There is no such thing as empty?  The universe behaves as if empty is an impossibility.  Or, empty can only exist in bubble form. Light seems to have the job of removing empty, in any possible form.

Bubbles jump up the Markov tree in order to have enough Nulls to keep light noise contained in the unit sphere. That is what mass means in physics terms. So don't we get a deficit of Nulls in free space? I dunno, it seems to be that if free space is so bad, then packing Nulls does not likely help, a deficit of nulls in free space means empty space might appear. What then? More bubbles?

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