Michael Mozina
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2009
- Messages
- 9,361
I remember reading something once (and bear with my here, my memory can be horrible at times) about the theoretical model of the 11-dimensional universe. It stated something along the lines of "The reason gravity is so weak is because it's actually being generated from / bleeding into another dimension within the 4 that we can directly observe." Couldn't something like that account for dark energy as well? If gravity is the localized warping of spacetime due to mass, couldn't dark energy be kind of a polar opposite of gravity? Interacting with the universe non-locally (everywhere at once) and instead of contracting and bending space, it's speeding up and/or causing inflation? There's a neat symmetry to it, if you kind of squint at it and hop on one foot.
It's called M-Theory.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-theory
