Physics, asked by XxcopycatxX, 6 hours ago

What is the whole idea of Multiverse Theory?Explain

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Answered by Tanishirai2410
1

The multiverse is a hypothetical group of multiple universes. Together, these universes comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, energy, information, and the physical laws and constants that describe them.

Answered by XxFantoamDEADPOOLXx
224

The Multiverse is a highly contentious notion, yet it is a pretty basic concept at its foundation. The Multiverse asserts that, just as the Earth does not possess a specific position in the Universe, nor does the Sun, the Milky Way, or any other location, the entire visible Universe does not.

The Multiverse is the concept that our Universe, and everything inside it, is only a minuscule portion of a greater structure. This bigger entity contains our observable Universe as a small portion of a larger Universe that goes beyond our observational boundaries.

That entire structure — the unobservable Universe — might be part of a wider spacetime that includes many other, unconnected Universes, some of which may or may not be comparable to those we live in.

A multiverse is a hypothetical collection of possibly different observable worlds, each of which would have everything empirically available to a linked community of observers. The visible cosmos, as seen via telescopes, is approximately 90 billion light-years wide. However, this world would be a tiny, if not minuscule, the portion of the multiverse. The multiverse concept has numerous manifestations, especially in cosmology, quantum physics, and philosophy, and frequently claims the real physical existence of various possible configurations or histories of the known observable world.

In 1895, American philosopher William James created the word “multiverse” to refer to the perplexing moral meaning of natural events rather than to other potential worlds.

There are four types of parallel Multiverse…

A parallel world, according to MIT mathematician and cosmologist Max Tegmark, may come in four varieties.

•Nothing in a parallel world could be qualitatively new or different from our own.

A parallel world might have entirely different basic physical rules.

•A parallel world might have the same fundamental rules of physics as ours. Still, it could have started with a different set of circumstances.

•A parallel world might have the same underlying physical laws as ours but different effective bylaws.

•Many scientists have disregarded the multiverse concept throughout the years due to one basic fact: If you can’t leave our own world, there’s no way to show that any other universes exist. That concept, however, is not shared by everyone.

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