The Effect Density Has on the Speed of Light, Time, and the Dimensions of the Multiverse

We show that as the dimensions of the Multiverse increase so does its density. This increase in density has the effect of decreasing the speed of light, slowing down time, and increasing the life span of each higher dimension and the life span of human beings occupying that higher dimension. We use the tenth dimension as the highest dimension as a special case but show that it is not possible to exactly determine its value because of varying factors that can end the Multiverse, sending all the Energy back into the original levels of the Quantum of the void that started the creation process.


Introduction
Consider a sphere of density ρ and radius R. The formula for gravity is g = G4πρh/3 where h takes the values between 0 and R. As density increases, gravity increases, which slows time down due to the larger value of gravity. Since c = dx/dt if dt increases because of time slowing down in a denser medium like glass, then c decreases by the same factor that dt increases. This same phenomenon applies to higher dimensions of the Multiverse whose vacuum densities increase with dimension because of the way higher dimensions are formed. As time slows down, so do space contracts, according to Einstein's Special and General Theories of Relativity, both time and space factors increase the density of higher dimensional space. Table 1 shows that as the Density of the medium increases the Speed of Light decreases. Even though Vacuum space has almost zero matter density, it has energy density ( v ε ) in it, which corresponds to the mass density (  Since it takes Energy to expand these dimensional parts to the next higher dimension and to combine them, using these factors for each of the dimensions to calculate the energy density of the next higher dimension will give a lower limit to the energy density of that higher dimension. The speed of light will give a higher limit while time and the life spans will give a lower limit as has been calculated in Tables 2-4.
In Table 2, we use the vacuum mass density ρ m and the speed of light in vacuum of our 3-D Universe = 3 × 10 8 m/s, to calculate the vacuum mass density and the speed of light in all the dimensions. In Table 3 In Table 4 The total time required to construct a 10-dimensional Multiverse is greater than 11.06 quadrillion years.

Main Text
Since time is relative, the life span of 48,384,000 Years would feel no different to the human being living in 10-D space than it does to the life span of 80 Years for the human being living in our 3-D Universe because in higher dimensions all A. Irani processes occur more slowly. Having noted that all the calculations in the Tables above have taken place with values from our point of view in 3-D space, this is very similar to an astronaut in a spaceship entering the event horizon of a Black Hole in our 3-D Universe. While from our point of view the spaceship is frozen in time, but from the astronaut's point of view time is moving in a natural fashion apart from the fact that the immense gravitational tidal forces of the Black Hole will tear him and his spaceship to pieces. The elementary particles from the astronaut and the spaceship will enter 4-D space which is currently the Dark Matter of our 3-D Universe. For human life to exist in the gravity of the higher dimensions the process will have to start up slowly because human beings will take the shape of the higher dimension that they live in. Since we cannot picture the fourth or higher than the fourth dimensions it is impossible to predict what those higher dimensional life forms would look like. We picked 10 as the final dimension of the Multiverse but that is only for a special case since the final dimension can vary due to several factors that can cause the end of the creation process of the Multiverse.
Factor 1: Instability caused by Entropy of the next highest value of Energy within the void that creates the Multiverse [2].
Factor 2: The next highest n = 10 value of the void required to build the eleventh spatial dimension not having more Energy in it than the tenth dimension of the Multiverse already created by the n = 9 value of the void [2].
Factor 3: The speed of light becomes smaller than the rotational Energy of the Multiverse, which causes the Multiverse to radiate away its Energy by the Cherenkov Effect [3]. Since the speed of light varies with dimension corrections have to be made for the formulas in Reference 2 which should be written as: where n goes from 0 to 9 to include c n in place of c. which is the total Energy contained in the 10 th dimensional Universe. Also, for very large N, P 10 > 4480P 2 c 2 /c 10 + 8960P 3 c 3 /c 10 + 6720P 4 c 4 /c 10 + 2987P 5 c 5 /c 10 + 933P 6 c 6 /c 10 + 224P 7 c 7 /c 10 + 44P 8 c 8 /c 10 + 7P 9 c 9 /c 10 for the energy in E 10 to be greater than 1 2 9 E E E + + +  . Factor 4: A collision between the Matter and Antimatter Multiverses causes the destruction of the Multiverse with the lesser number of dimensions and a partial destruction of the Multiverse with the larger number of dimensions [3].