The Basics

This page introduces the core ideas behind the Dark Matter Energy Theory. These concepts form the foundation for the full model and help explain how curvature, membrane structure, and expansion work together to produce the effects we observe.


1. Curvature Creates Gravity

Gravity is not a force pulling objects together — it is the shape of space itself. Massive objects create dips or wells in the membrane, and smaller objects follow these curves.

Curvature around a single mass
Gravity — Single Mass: A single object creates a smooth curvature well that nearby objects follow.

When two masses are present, their curvature wells overlap and combine.

Curvature around two masses
Gravity — Two Masses: Overlapping curvature wells show how multiple objects shape the membrane together.

2. The Universe Sits on a Membrane

The theory proposes that our universe is a curved region on a larger cosmic membrane. This membrane contains many regions — each behaving like its own universe — with soft, overlapping boundaries.

Three-universe membrane diagram
Three‑Universe Membrane: Adjacent curvature regions on a continuous cosmic membrane.

This structure allows curvature, light, and expansion to behave in ways that explain dark matter, dark energy, and JWST anomalies without requiring exotic particles.


3. Expansion Comes From Membrane Tension

As regions of the membrane stretch, they create tension. This tension drives expansion — the effect we call dark energy.

Dark energy outflow
Dark Energy Outflow: Membrane tension drives outward flow and accelerated expansion.

Expansion is not uniform — it depends on curvature gradients and membrane structure.

Expansion through membrane tension
Expansion Through Membrane Tension: Curved regions stretch and expand due to tension.

4. The Core Universe Symbol

This symbol represents the central idea of the theory: a curved region on a continuous membrane, connected to neighbouring regions.

Core universe symbol
Core Universe Symbol: The central icon representing the theory’s membrane region.