Darth Wong wrote:Since there is no such thing as an established physics of two-dimensional objects, I would love to know how you derived these predictions.
There is no established physics of two dimensional objects because a two dimensional object has no established basis in physics.
The macro-scale event of "touch" is a manifestation of the electro-magnetic force - as atoms come closer together, the tiny E field created by the different in position of the positively charge nucleus and negatively charged electron shells causes mutual repulsion. You can't simply say that the object is somehow two dimensional and yet still able to be "touched", as zero thickness implies that the object's E field is a constant 0 right up until the exact plane in space the object occupies, at which point the field discontinuously jumps to a non-zero value. That would be a violation of Maxwell's laws.
On the other hand, it
is possible that there is no "inside" of the portal, and it simply causes translation in space, rather than acting like a tunnel. However, there would still be a
three dimensional "rim" of the portal, on which it is possible to break wings.
Baughn wrote:There is absolutely no reason a two-dimensional object can't have such a field. The field will be three-dimensional; the object need not be.
On a micro-scale, there are only one dimensional objects and fields. If a macroscopic object has, as you say, a "force field" that other objects can touch, then it is, macroscopically, 3-d. The very property of having such a field is what makes everything we see appear to be a 3 dimensional object, instead of a collection of points.
Since I actually came up with the idea of the bubble universes shrinking in order to preserve the first law of thermodynamics despite an omnipresent energy release, I would like to point out that the concept is not the same thing as spontaneous conversion of matter to energy.
I guess I might have misunderstood what's going on with the bubbles. I had assumed that, as the bubble universe shrunk, is was slowly consuming the matter contained in it. If this is not the case, what is happening to the matter inside the bubble as it shrinks? And what mechanism is providing the energy?