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Vibrational Cosmology is a theory demonstrating that existing theories can be unified through a small shift in perspective. It rejects existing mysticism and contrived extra dimensions, instead presenting a mechanistic worldview with clear cause and effect. This theory defines time differently. It interprets time not as a fundamental dimension, but as an emergent dimension, and attempts to unify existing theories through this interpretation. Explained by the keyword "vibration," this theory uses a single field (the Vibrational Field) and two axioms to describe relativity, quantum mechanics, cosmology, and the mysteries of modern physics (such as Fermat's principle, the arrow of time, dark energy, and more). Time dilation in relativity is represented as a relationship (analogous to simultaneous equations) between sine and cosine. This form avoids the problem of infinities and perfectly derives Einstein's time dilation formula, including the Lorentz factor, using basic trigonometry. It explains the three representative problems of quantum mechanics—quantum entanglement, quantum leap, and quantum tunneling—with a single principle. The cosmological challenge of inflation is explained without requiring an additional field. Furthermore, other cosmological challenges—such as the Hubble tension, early massive black holes, and the matter-antimatter asymmetry—are all explained from this single Vibrational Field. This theory does not negate existing theories or claim they are wrong. It merely suggests that a more fundamental explanation is possible, and that theories appearing disparate or impossible to unify actually stem from a single root, making this a theory for unification.
Cho, Junghyun (Wed,) studied this question.