An anomaly in space and time and the origin of dynamics
Joan A. Vaccaro

TL;DR
This paper addresses a fundamental anomaly in physics related to time asymmetry, proposing a new framework where dynamics emerge phenomenologically, leading to a unified view of space and time.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to resolve the time asymmetry anomaly by allowing dynamics to emerge phenomenologically, challenging conventional assumptions about space and time.
Findings
Both versions of the Hamiltonian operate equally in the universe.
Time and space differences are epiphenomenal rather than fundamental.
A new picture of space and time below everyday experience.
Abstract
The Hamiltonian defines the dynamical properties of the universe. Evidence from particle physics shows that there is a different version of the Hamiltonian for each direction of time. As there is no physical basis for the universe to be asymmetric in time, both versions must operate equally. However, conventional physical theories accommodate only one version of the Hamiltonian and one direction of time. This represents an unexplained anomaly in conventional physics and calls for a reworking of the concepts of time and space. Here I explain how the anomaly can be resolved by allowing dynamics to emerge phenomenologically. The resolution offers a picture of time and space that lies below our everyday experience, and one in which their differences are epiphenomenal rather than elemental.
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