Loading video...

Video Failed to Load

Go Home

Gravity makes things orbit...but what happens when the mass distribution itself is rotating and dragging phase space into resonances and chaos? In this scene we follow tens of thousands of stars in a toy barred galaxy: a flat disc with a central mass and a rotating bar of extra...

152,143 views • 7 months ago •via X (Twitter)

0 Comments

No comments available

Comments from the original post will appear here

Related Videos

A common misconception in physics is that gravity must be negligible at the quantum scale because its measured strength appears weak compared to electromagnetism and the strong nuclear force. However, this perception arises from considering gravity only in its weak field limit. Obviously, it will appear weak under such conditions, but the situation changes when we consider regions of high mass-energy density. For example, when examining strong gravitational fields near black holes, the force becomes immensely powerful. With this in mind, lets re-examine unification and gravity at the quantum scale: Following our holographic mass solution, elementary particles like protons are found to be microscopic Schwarzschild black holes and their mass-energy density is sufficient to create a gravitational curvature equivalent to the strong nuclear force. The vacuum energy density of space provides enough energy to maintain these structures through Planck-scale dynamics, preventing their rapid evaporation via Hawking radiation, so they are ultra-stable. These discoveries, expounded in our studies like The Origin of Mass and the Nature of Gravity, available to download for free on CERN's Zenodo preprint server-🔗 -demonstrate that what we observe as distinct fundamental forces are in fact manifestations of a unified force operating at different scales, where quantum vacuum fluctuations significantly curve spacetime (the curvature being gravity) with the resulting encapsulation generating screening effects that modulate the apparent strength of gravity from its fundamental high-energy state, which results in nuclear confinement forces, to its familiar weak-field behavior that appears as regular Newtonian gravity.

Nassim Haramein

19,882 views • 1 year ago

Desveaux’s Theory of Helix Fields Tweet 1 of 2 For decades, we treated the universe like a giant stage where particles act out their lives. What if the stage itself isn't empty? What if the "void" of space is a structured, rotating medium that is constantly twisting & turning? We have been looking at the pieces of the puzzle, but ignoring the board they sit on. It’s been hiding in plain in sight? My idea on Helix Fields suggests everything we see, from the smallest atom to the largest galaxy, is actually a "corkscrew" in the fabric of reality. In standard physics, we think of particles like tiny billiard balls. In Helix Field Theory, we rethink them as solitons - essentially stable, high-energy "whirlpools" or "corkscrews" made of space itself. Imagine a ribbon. If you pull it straight, it’s flat and simple. But if you twist it, you create a spiral. That twist is what we call Torsion. My theory says that what we perceive as "matter" is simply a place where the vacuum of space is rotating so tightly that it creates a "density core." To explain how this all works, we use a mathematical roadmap called a Lagrangian. Think of it as a master recipe or cookbook for the universe. It combines four key ingredients: 1. Electricity and Magnetism: How light and energy move. 2. Scalar Fields: The underlying "pressure" of the vacuum in space itself 3. Matter: The physical "stuff" we can touch. 4. Torsion: The "twist" or rotational force of space. By looking at the universe through this "helix" lens, we can solve two of the biggest headaches in modern science: The Hubble Tension - Astronomers are currently arguing over how fast the universe is expanding because different measurements give different answers. My theory suggests this "tension" exists because we haven't accounted for the universal rotation (torsion) affecting our measurements. The Dark Sector - We know there is "Dark Matter" and "Dark Energy" out there, but we can't find it. Helix Field Theory suggests these aren't invisible particles, but rather geometric artifacts - ripples and shadows created by the rotating vacuum itself. We are moving away from a universe of "things" and toward a universe of geometry and motion. If the vacuum of space is a structured, rotating medium, then we aren't just living in the universe - we are part of its physical rotation. The "Quantum Substratum" isn't just a theory; it’s a new way to understand the very "twist" of existence. - Protons: tiny rotating black hole-like cores anchoring the scalar field - Neutrons: stabilisers that prevent proton cores from decaying - Quarks & Gluons: the deepest torsion knots; the strong force is intrinsic torsion - Electrons: corkscrew-shaped solitons producing microscopic magnetic vortices - Neutrinos: ultra-light messenger waves traveling along the field’s “communication lines.” - Photons: instruction ripples traveling at light speed - Dark Photons: the “torsion messengers” of the Helix Field. They carry the twist, regulate the twist, and stabilize the twisting motion - W and Z bosons: on/off switches and stabilising nodes in the neutrino network - Higgs field: the local density of the scalar field, giving solitons their effective mass - Dark energy: the gentle outward push caused by the field’s overall rotation - Entropy: friction in that rotation, giving time its arrow - Cosmic Microwave Background: the universal “sustain pedal” like on a guitar or piano, keeping the field’s vibrations in phase. In this vision, dark matter isn’t missing matter - it’s the gravitational echo of the scalar field itself. Exploring antiparticles further: they may regulate the flow of time itself. In a rotational and torsional universe Time is a neutral observer: the past and future are fixed, but the present - our free will - is the point where choices echo into fate. Time is the “God” of the universe: ever-present, ever-aware, never interfering - just watching, as we decide which thread to follow.

Clinton Desveaux

23,492 views • 6 months ago