MIRROR DIMENSION

MIRROR DIMENSION

The Mirror Dimensiom

The Mirror Dimension is a parallel dimension that allows the user to practice their magical abilities and fight their enemies without the public's knowledge. The mirror dimension or universe is one of the type of multiverse which represents the opposite nature of our universe.

The virtual world joining hands with the physical world has been come to be known by many names: AR Cloud, Magicverse, Mirrorworld, Cyberverse, Planet-scale AR, Spatial Computing, and the Metaverse. While all these names are used in slightly different contexts by different companies or groups, they are all names to describe the augmented reality experiences overlaid over the world. These experiences will be shared across multiple users and platforms and will change our perception of reality once wide spread. There will be many different realities to experience linked to physical space for us to explore. This is the new technology that’s going to change how we function and interact as a society. It’s going to be awkward and challenging as we explore this new space to fix current problems as well as address new ones.

There are many exciting possibilities that the metaverse has to offer. I am most interested in what shared experience artists and designers will create in public spaces. Also, the possible wealth of information and knowledge that could be shared about locations and navigation. Having traveled abroad by myself I can really see the benefits of using technology to navigate, discover new things, and learn about the area you are in. It frees you to be independent and explore what most interests you and not confined to friends or guides showing you around. I can image how much easier and more convenient it would be using AR to add another layer of information and experience to the world.

The ‘mirror world’ theory

The new research, published in the Physical Review Letters by a team of astrophysicists from the University of New Mexico and the University of California, Davis, suggests an unseen “mirror world” dark sector of new particles that are all copies of known particles that exists exists alongside ours and interacts with our world only via gravity.

“In practice, this scaling symmetry could only be realized by including a mirror world in the model—a parallel universe with new particles that are all copies of known particles,” said Francis-Yan Cyr-Racine, assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at The University of New Mexico and one of the authors of the new paper. “The mirror world idea first arose in the 1990s but has not previously been recognized as a potential solution to the Hubble constant problem.”

This “mirror world” could account for the phenomenon of dark matter, or be an exotic form of it, that could be one way of solving the Hubble tension.

‘Mirror worlds’ are from particle physics

Yes, it seems crazy at face value, said Cyr-Racine. “But such mirror worlds have a large physics literature in a completely different context since they can help solve important problem in particle physics,” he said. “Our work allows us to link, for the first time, this large literature to an important problem in cosmology.”

In effect they are proposing a tweak to the current cosmological model to explain the discrepancies in measurements of the Hubble constant that, crucially, needs to involve an exotic form of dark matter.

The new theory isn’t perfect, incorrectly predicting the amount of deuterium and helium in the early universe, but that’s a smaller problem for scientists to solve than the “Hubble tension,” it’s argued.

To view or add a comment, sign in

More articles by Jebin Blessan D S

  • FUTURE OF AI

    The Evolution of AI AI’s influence on technology is due in part because of how it impacts computing. Through AI…

    1 Comment
  • HUMANS VS ROBOTS

    Humans versus Robots As humans step off their home planet into the surrounding solar system and beyond, they do not go…

    1 Comment
  • METAVERSE AI

    What is the Metaverse?The Metaverse is a term coined by the science fiction author Neal Stephenson in his novel Snow…

Explore content categories