![]() ![]() The 2003 literature also said that Planck might be able to observe some duplicate images (the hall of mirrors effect) and I assume that they didn’t since I have not heard anything at all about this since ’03.On Friday, March 20, as the U.S. (and did they mean Observable Universe, or the entire space?) I had read in 2003 that the “low frequencies (harmonics) were missing”, suggesting that the Universe at large was a finite space.Īnd I am also wondering why the 2003 reports suggested a dodecahedron Universe size of only 60 billion light years across. Specifically, I am wondering if they found any lower frequencies. I would appreciate any updates on the matter! Whatever happened to this idea for a Dodecahedron Universe, in general? I was waiting for years for the Planck results to confirm it, but never heard anything at all about it since 2003. Ahmanson for first bringing this finding to my attention. There’s real data to look at and the possibility of getting a definite answer.” If proven by further evidence and scrutiny, the model would represent a major discovery about the nature of the cosmos.Ī description of their research appears in the science journal Nature and at National Geographic, below and HERE.Ī 2015 update by Luminet can be found here: What makes it exciting now is it’s not a matter of idle speculation. It could be affirmed, or it could be refuted. Weeks cautioned that his team’s model of a finite, dodecahedral-shaped universe, while promising, is hardly a proven theory. He said, “There’s more work to be done. ![]() This is still a theory, but supported by data that can be tested. See the Five and Phi and Penrose Tiling pages for other relationships of the number 5 and pentagons to phi. The ratios of the lengths of the resulting line segments are all based on phi,, or 1.618! Take a pentagon and connect all the points to form a 5-pointed star. The connection to Phi is found in the Pentagons that form the faces of the Dodecahedron.Ī shown on the Geometry page, A dodecahedron consists of twelve pentagons. The study revealed that the math adds up if the universe is finite and shaped like a dodecahedron, as in the illustration below provided by Weeks: infinite, flat, negatively curved (saddle-shaped), positively curved (spherical) space and a torus (cylindric). The study analyzed a variety of different models for the universe, including finite vs. In October 2003, a team including French cosmologists and Jeffrey Weeks, a freelance mathematician and recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship or “genius award,” used this data to develop a model for the shape of the universe. NASA released the first WMAP cosmic background radiation data in February of 2003. Density fluctuations in this radiation can also tell scientists much about the physical nature of space. Like visible light from distant stars and galaxies, cosmic background radiation allows scientists to peer into the past to the time when the universe was in its infancy. In October 2001, NASA began collecting data with the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) on cosmic background radiation. ![]() New findings in 2003 reveal that the shape of the Universe is a Dodecahedron based on Phi. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |