"Physicists have identified a set of fundamental symmetries in nature. The three most important symmetries are: charge (if you flip the charges of all the particles involved in an interaction to their opposite charge, you'll get the same interaction); parity (if you look at the mirror image of an interaction, you get the same result); and time (if you run an interaction backward in time, it looks the same).

Physical interactions obey most of these symmetries most of the time, which means that there are sometimes violations. But physicists have never observed a violation of a combination of all three symmetries at the same time. If you take every single interaction observed in nature and flip the charges, take the mirror image, and run it backward in time, those interactions behave exactly the same.

This fundamental symmetry is given a name: CPT symmetry, for charge (C), parity (P) and time (T).

In a new paper recently accepted for publication in the journal Annals of Physics, scientists propose extending this combined symmetry. Usually this symmetry only applies to interactions — the forces and fields that make up the physics of the cosmos. But perhaps, if this is such an incredibly important symmetry, it applies to the whole entire universe itself. In other words, this idea extends this symmetry from applying to just the "actors" of the universe (forces and fields) to the "stage" itself, the entire physical object of the universe."

  • Wheaties [comrade/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    i'm really just a dumbass but

    you know how there's all this extra gravity we cannot account for, so we just pretend it's a "dark matter" for the physics syms? how silly would it be to ask if that extra gravity is coming from singularities in the windershins universe?

    • modsarefascist [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      I mean that is one of the potential explanations of dark matter. It's unlikely for a number of reasons tho. They'd have to be everywhere distributed pretty evenly.

      • Wheaties [comrade/them]
        ·
        2 years ago

        isn't that what you expect to see after heat-death, when it's all black holes slowly dissolving to Hawking radiation?