Skip to content

axelvyrn/chrono-analysis

Repository files navigation

Abstract: License: CC BY-SA 4.0

This theory explores a new way of understanding time — not as just something we measure with clocks, but as a force or wave-like field that flows through the universe. The key idea is that time isn't separate from space or matter, but deeply connected to both.

Just like gravity affects how objects move, this theory proposes a "time field" that influences how living beings and particles experience time. The strength of this field — called chronal potential — could vary depending on mass, motion, or position in space (for example, near a black hole).

In the latest update, time is described using an equation: $$\Delta t = (-\nabla\phi_t) \cdot |(\vec{T} \times \vec{p})|$$

and another variation proposes

$$ d\tau = dt \cdot \sqrt{1 - \frac{2GM}{rc^2}} \implies \sqrt{1 + \frac{2\phi_t(\vec{r}, t)}{c^2}} $$

This means:

The passage of time you feel ($$\Delta t$$) depends on how your momentum ($$\vec{p}$$) interacts with the direction of the time field ($$\vec{T}$$), and the strength of time at your location (chronal potential ($$\phi_t$$))

The theory also explores whether time is a force, a wave, or an infinite field, and considers if it's something that can curve, loop, or carry us through it — like a river we don't yet see, but one we’re all flowing through.

GR says "spacetime curves." I do not disprove it but... I ask: "But what medium bends, and what causes the curvature?" It might turn false or useless later, but it was worth trying to me.

Pagination

This is the correct order of reading the project:

  1. Time Definition
  2. Theory of Time
  3. Supporting Experiments to the Theory
  4. Genesis Chronofield Equations
  5. Necessary Experiments for the Theory

About

A work-in-progress of deciphering time and its form

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published