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>> No.9072367 [View]
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9072367

>>9072342
No, our universe has a vacuum energy state that gives all the laws that fields and particles abide by. Think of it like a bubble. If our vacuum shifts to a more stable lower energy state, matter as we know it won't have the same laws and won't exist the same way. The bubble pops. We would be destroyed and our atoms would never exist again and thus never have the chance to assemble into new life.
The permanent end of everything.

Read this:

In their paper, Coleman and de Luccia noted: The possibility that we are living in a false vacuum has never been a cheering one to contemplate. Vacuum decay is the ultimate ecological catastrophe; in the new vacuum there are new constants of nature; after vacuum decay, not only is life as we know it impossible, so is chemistry as we know it. However, one could always draw stoic comfort from the possibility that perhaps in the course of time the new vacuum would sustain, if not life as we know it, at least some structures capable of knowing joy. This possibility has now been eliminated.

SCARY SHIT

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