Explains Dark Matter, Dark Energy, Black Holes, and the Six Universe-Breaker Galaxies - Without Breaking Einstein's Laws or Inventing New Physics
What if the universe isn't built on separate forces and hidden matter, but on a single living current flowing through everything?
In Lava-Void Cosmology: Unified Fluid Theory, theoretical philosopher C. Rich unveils a groundbreaking vision that reimagines the cosmos as a self-sustaining ocean of energy - one unified fluid that behaves as both dark matter and dark energy, shaping galaxies, voids, and black holes in a continuous cycle of creation and collapse.
Working entirely within the parameters of Einstein's General Relativity, C. Rich demonstrates how this dynamic fluid model explains the universe's missing 95 percent without introducing new forces or exotic physics. The same mathematical framework that governs gravity also drives the universe's expansion and structure, seamlessly resolving the long-standing divide between dark matter's attraction and dark energy's repulsion.
At the heart of this theory lies an elegant simplicity: density determines behavior. In crowded regions of spacetime, the fluid thickens, pooling to form galaxies and stars. In vast cosmic voids, it thins, accelerating expansion. This natural ebb and flow not only unifies dark components but also accounts for the mysterious six "universe-breaker" galaxies revealed by the James Webb Space Telescope - massive structures formed far earlier than standard cosmology allows, yet perfectly consistent within the Lava-Void framework.
Combining rigorous mathematics with lucid metaphor, C. Rich draws on the Einstein field equations, the Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker metric, and the generalized Chaplygin gas equation of state to show how a single cosmic substance can weave the fabric of spacetime itself. Black holes become the gravitational drains of this great ocean, recycling energy back into the flow, maintaining the universe's equilibrium without violating a single physical law.
Lava-Void Cosmology challenges the boundaries between science and philosophy, inviting readers to see the universe not as a cold void, but as a living continuum - pulsing, evolving, and interconnected. It is a vision where Einstein's mathematics meets poetic coherence, and where every particle, star, and thought exists as part of a single, eternal current.