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What if the universe didn't begin with a singularity-but a supernova?
In this bold and rigorous follow-up to The Cosmic Supernova Hypothesis, Part Two presents a scientifically sharpened cosmological model that challenges the Big Bang paradigm. Rather than emerging from an abstract point of infinite density, the universe is reimagined as the turbulent shell of a higher-dimensional explosion-an event with structure, direction, and physical mechanisms rooted in fluid dynamics, thermodynamics, and dimensional geometry.
This volume addresses the major hurdles faced by alternative cosmologies head-on, providing:- Testable predictions for CMB anisotropies, nonlinear redshift patterns, and high-redshift galaxy formation.- Mathematical models grounded in blastwave physics, turbulent energy dissipation, and higher-dimensional expansion dynamics.- A redefinition of dark matter and cosmic structure, explained through pressure gradients, vortex instabilities, and entropy flows rather than invisible particles.- Comparative analysis with Big Bang cosmology, including nucleosynthesis, redshift, and cosmic microwave background features.- Philosophical extensions into precursor physics, black hole cosmogenesis, and a self-replicating multiverse-without abandoning empirical grounding.
Designed to satisfy both scientifically trained readers and philosophically curious thinkers, this volume features plain-language explanations alongside technical appendices with equations and simulation logic.
Whether you are a physicist, astronomer, cosmology enthusiast, or seeker of cosmic origins, this work invites you to reconsider how we frame the universe-and to test a new model that may better fit the data.
The Cosmic Supernova Hypothesis - Part Two dares to ask:
What if creation was an explosion, not of nothing, but of something far larger than our spacetime can hold?