On Wed, Feb 28, 2007 at 05:46:15PM -0600, Cybe R. Wizard wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] said: > > It turns out that when you add the mass of the matter in the universe > > to the gravitational potential energy (which happens to be negative), > > that the sum of the two is "suspiciously close to zero" (to quota a > > famous physicist whose name I can't remember). > > Hmm, the universe as one of a pair of virtual particles on the event > horizon of a /whale/ of a black hole... > That has possibilities. I started to type, "real possibilities," but > what does that /mean/ in this context?
I was thinking that too, but didn't have the guts. How about the universe as one particle of the two created in vacuum... can't remember what the term is but a particle and anti-particle randomly appearing and then anniahilating each other shortly thereafter. what is that called? null-point energy? A
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