Approaching Science: The Mysterious Dark Zone
Content
Approaching Science: The Mysterious Dark Zone
This document was automatically summarized and generated by intelligent web crawlers. The original video program has been removed due to unknown reasons. I wonder if anyone's ever thought about this: The speed of light in a vacuum is 299,792,458 meters per second. This means light from a star takes minutes to reach a planet's surface, and years to reach its nearest neighboring star. So, here's the question: Since the speed of light, the ultimate speed limit, is so slow on a cosmic scale, how are we able to communicate in real-time with people on the other side of the universe via the Aether Network? Strictly speaking, we don't know either. Don't be impatient. Since we produced this episode, we certainly aren't going in blind. It's just that the Mythus of the universe is inexhaustible, and people still can't fully comprehend the ins and outs or the microscopic principles of the Aether Network. Speaking of which, I bet some of our viewers are thinking: "What!? Isn't the Aether Network supposed to be designed and built by humans?" If you mean the base stations or fiber optic hubs outside your front door, then sure, those are man-made. But don't forget, those are just electromagnetic technologies based in normal spacetime. They have nothing to do with how the Aether Network transmits information faster than light. Take sailing for example. People can only set sail because the ocean exists. However, the need to sail didn't create the ocean. The Aether Network is the same. It existed naturally first, and our utilization of it came second. From a physics perspective, the "Aether" part of the Aether Network is a projection of a higher-dimensional physical structure onto three-dimensional space, which requires negative energy (likely in the form of internal Imaginary energy) to maintain... Too abstract? Let's put it another way: The Second Law of Thermodynamics applies in reverse within the Aether. The arrow of time there doesn't point toward increased entropy, but rather toward entropy decrease (or even follows a closed curve). In reality, cause precedes effect, but in the Aether, effect may precede cause. Scholars believe this symbolizes the essence of Mythus: In THEIR domain, the causality symbolized most strongly by the constancy of the speed of light simply vanishes. With all that out of the way, we can finally discuss the topic of this video: the "Dark Zone." To use a metaphor, a Dark Zone is like a black hole within the Aether. It harbors every possibility, yet it is highly dangerous and possesses an instinct to devour everything. However, unlike black holes in real space, Dark Zones are extremely unstable. They are constantly born, destroyed, and born again deep within the Aether. Their boundaries are erratic and shifting, making them far more dangerous than stable black holes. Fortunately, Dark Zones do not rise to the surface of the Aether, so they have no effect on the information we usually transmit via the Aether Network. Let's return to our initial question: The nature of Aether explains how the Aether Network achieves superluminal information transmission, but there is actually another hidden issue that remains unresolved, that is, how does the Aether Network encompass the entire cosmos? As a natural existence akin to an ocean, why are the interfaces between Aether and realspace distributed so evenly that the Aether Network can be accessed from every planet? After all, oceans aren't always interconnected, nor do rivers always flow into the sea in other natural phenomena. Scholars hold widely divergent views on this profound issue. One school of thought maintains that in the distant past, the Dark Zone once reached the surface of the Aether, causing the destruction and rebirth of the entire universe... And it is precisely because of this rebirth that the Aether became omnipresent. In other words, they essentially believe that the Dark Zone has sculpted the universe into a form in which Mythus can intervene. If this holds true, then in the distant future... even after the Finality has reached its finale, it isn't impossible that Mythus could reboot the universe once more. That may just be the most mysterious and alluring aspect of the Dark Zone.
