>The visible Universe (4%) is light which is all around you and that is a wavelength. The >invisible Universe (96%) which is also all around you, is also a wavelength ...
>
>The reason that it is also a wavelength is because we have now been able to prove beyond >any doubt that other man-made wavelength do also work and, therefore, exist like between >Earth and Mars...
>
> The evidence that the Invisible Universe is also a
> wavelength is primarily done by exclusion since
> there is nothing else there that has been
> detected! No ether, nothing, just vaccum and
> waves, of course...
Let's take an easy example. The sun is part of what you call visible universe, because we can detect it. Is sun a wave-length? Of course not, it's a huge ball of gas. But we can detect it because of the light it emmits. This light has different wavelengts, but it IS not a wavelenght.
What you call invisible universe is dark matter and dark energy. Dark matter cannot be detected by it's emitted radiation and dark energy does not interact strongly through any other fundamental forces than gravity.
Dark energy:
"The exact nature of this dark energy is a matter of speculation. It is known to be very homogeneous, not very dense and doesn't interact strongly through any of the fundamental forces other than gravity. Since it is not very dense—roughly 10-29 grams per cubic centimeter—it is hard to imagine experiments to detect it in the laboratory (but see the references for a claimed detection). Dark energy can only have such a profound impact on the universe, making up 70% of all energy, because it uniformly fills otherwise empty space. The two leading models are quintessence and the cosmological constant."
[
en.wikipedia.org]
Dark matter:
"Cosmologists (astrophysicists who study the history, origin, and future of the universe) believe there are two classes of dark matter: baryonic dark matter (composed of baryons - protons and neutrons - such as massive compact halo objects or MACHOs), and the mysterious "shadow matter" composed of hypothetical non-baryonic subatomic particles, specific candidates of which include axions, WIMPs, SIMPs, heavy neutrinos, mirror matter, and the big-particle hypothesis. (The acronym MACHO was chosen specifically to contrast with the theory of WIMPs.)"
[
en.wikipedia.org]
The reason for this "invisible universe" is that there is no significant amounts of radiation that we could detect. How you get "the invisible universe is also a wavelenght" from the facts on this matter is beyond me.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 05/26/2005 03:05AM by Tommi Huhtamaki.