This article is a fictional‑technical illustration for the "Practical IDM" series, showing how the theoretical concepts of the Infinite‑Dimensional Multiverse Model (IDM) might look in practice. It describes a hypothetical flight of a multiversecraft pilot aboard the MPC‑1 Wanderlust along the chain of universes from U₀ to A₁,₅. The action begins at an interuniversal spaceport located on the far side of the Moon. The reader follows all stages of preparation: donning the Pilgrim‑1 spacesuit, boarding the ship, checking primary and redundant systems (mechanical controls, analogue instruments, paper map). The cockpit features a generator control console with knobs for α, mₚ, Λ, G, a holographic display, and a paper atlas of the multiverse. Five successive transitions are then described. A₁,₁ – a habitable universe with constants close to ours; A₁,₂ – sterile, without stars; A₁,₃ – vacuum‑unstable, with a 23% decay risk (brief 5‑second entry); A₁,₄ – an empty cold vacuum; A₁,₅ – a singular universe with a collapsar at the entry point (99.7% destruction risk, emergency exit with 12% interference screen damage). Each transition is described with the pilot's subjective sensations – sounds, flashes, vibrations. In the post‑flight report, the route is marked on a paper "beads" map with colour coding: green – safe, yellow – moderate risk, orange – high risk, blue – useless, red – forbidden. The article concludes that A₁,₅ is not suitable for investigation and requires remote sensing without entry.
Alexander Yourievitch Kotelnikov (Thu,) studied this question.