Why A Cold Universe

Robertskaf
3 min readDec 21, 2020

The Absolute Zero

Dear Readers,

I am sharing with you a chapter from my book, Survival The Ultimate Mission.

It is a free e-book that can be found at robertskaf.gitbook.io

The e-book version of this chapter can be found on this link.

Before going any further, it would be useful to introduce more evidence supporting the theory of an infinite universe. In my view, there must be a reason why space is extremely cold. This is a paradox, for in principle, with trillions of stars and their coronas generating so much heat, the universe should be hot. This is what happens anywhere under normal circumstances. This is what science has proved on earth or on any other planet. Global warming is the best example to verify my observation. In less than a century, human activity has caused the temperature on earth to move up by a few degrees. According to scientific studies, our planet would be getting warmer should we continue the same course. Now, one may assume that this should be the case when we have trillions of stars generating immeasurable amount of heat all around the universe. Not for one century but for billions of years. However, this is not what is happening. Here is my take on this phenomenon. Imagine yourself facing huge fans that are rotating at an enormous speed, no matter what temperature you start with, the wind chill factor would cause the temperature to drop substantially. I happen to live in Thunder Bay, it is a city located in North West Ontario, I have witnessed frost forming on my windshield while the outside temperature was over 5 degrees Celsius. While scraping the windshield, I noticed that the other windows that were not exposed to the wind had no frost. Gas or sub-particle’s compression and release should also be noted when it comes to the extreme cold temperature in space. Here is another interesting observation about how these massive invisible pockets can be responsible for the extreme cold temperature encountered in the invisible universe. As these huge pockets move around, their mysterious contents at times contract while at other times expand. On top of that, they are continuously colliding or moving away from one another. The result of this mechanism becomes very similar to the compressor installed in any freezer. Basically, as they interact with each other, these huge zones act like a compressor. The difference here is scale. We are talking compressors that are measured in light years. Add this process to the fan theory and you will have the answer to the extreme cold temperature. Earlier on, we talked about how massive pockets of invisible entropy spin and turn. As they do so the bring the temperature of space to absolute zero. This is very similar to any fan in use, the faster it turns the colder the air. Looking at the universe from this perspective would lead us to conclude that space is an infinite deep freezer.

This is what is happening in space. The infinite universe has no center of gravity. Come to think about it, this makes perfect sense. Not only does this make it impossible for the universe to collapse, but it would also cancel out all universal pressure. Think for a moment about what would happen if the universe was finite. Even if it does not contract and collapse, the universal pressure would be so great that it would not allow for any living thing to exist. This is when the theory of the “Big Crunch” would become relevant. For with time, the whole universe would be reduced again to a tiny pebble.

On earth, we must deal only with our own atmospheric pressure. Our bodies can only sustain a bit more than that before it is crushed into pieces. Looking at sunken ships at the bottom of deep waters would be a good way to understand how high pressure works. In the deep sea, even the mightiest ship would be completely dismantled, crushed or mangled.

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