
Colliding Parallel Universe Theory
The Colliding Parallel Universe (CPU) Theory
Colliding Parallel Universe Theory is a speculative framework asking whether interactions between parallel universes, bubble universes, or brane-like cosmological structures could produce measurable anomalies in spacetime, radiation, gravity, timekeeping, or observed physical systems.
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The hypothesis: When two or more parallel universes begin to collide over a period of 100-200 years and cause fractures in reality, trackable by math, technology, and science, that becomes observable by people, not just specialized technology or only theory.
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The results of this observable activity, the result of equilibrium, has ties to: wormholes/portals/vortices, Mandela Effect, unexplained appearances and disappearances, issues with time, and evolution and change.
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1) 2+ Universes of similar volume and a similar timeline collide to form a double bubble (Weisstein) until equilibrium forces a melding of the universes.
2) During equilibrium between universes drastic changes occur, including a "correction" of timelines.
3) Colliding universes of unequal volume and/or drastically different timelines may result in the weaker of the two universes becoming destroyed with either a) some adaptations to the stronger universe; or, b) some sort of catastrophe occurring to the stronger universe.
4) This occurs multiple times across billions+ years, but not at regular intervals.
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If CPU Theory has physical validity, possible evidence should appear first in measurable systems: cosmological data, gravitational-wave backgrounds, atomic-clock networks, radiation/EM readings, particle behavior, or statistically significant anomaly clusters. This evidence is listed in 3 tiers below.
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Tier 1: Physics-adjacent evidence
Cosmic bubble collisions, brane cosmology, CMB anomalies, gravitational waves, wormholes, time dilation, atomic-clock discrepancies.
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Tier 2: Earth-system / biological anomalies
Rapid evolution, climate stress, environmental disruption, radiation/EMF/gravity hypotheses.
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Tier 3: Anecdotal / cultural phenomena
Mandela Effect, folklore portals, time slips, disappearances, personal recollections.