The Galaxy Cycle – Epic of the Universe
In the beginning there was no time. There was no space. Only the pulsating, invisible supergravitational fabric of reality. In it, in its finest vibrations, the primary building blocks of matter were born – the fundamental particles FP1 and FP2. They were not just points, but oscillating energy nodes, combining the potential of the entire cosmos.
Under the influence of supergravitational forces, these particles began to arrange themselves into geometric structures – tetrahedra, quasi-petogons, helical filaments, which built the nodes of the cosmic lattice. These were not random shapes, but primary crystallizations of the very fabric of space. They laid the foundations of the future galactic architecture.
From these structures, protons and neutrons were formed, stabilized by internal magnetic and electrostatic interactions. They, in turn, began to attract electrons – particles that carried spin dynamics, subject to the same principles. In this process, the first atom was born: hydrogen – the most elementary and at the same time the most important particle of the Universe.
Gradually, through spontaneous crystallization of matter, hydrogen merged into helium and more complex elements. Thus, obeying the natural vibrations of supergravity, the periodic table was formed – not just a row of chemical elements, but a musical chord in the symphony of the Universe.
With the accumulation of matter, the first stars were formed – giant fusion reactors, burning with the energy of the first elements hydrogen and helium, locked in supergravity fields. The stars attracted each other, arranging themselves in spiral galaxies, in whose cores lurked black holes – the unchanging engines of the cosmic cycle.
When a star died, its matter did not disappear – it passed into the next stage of the eternal rhythm. Part of it dispersed as a nebula, forming new stars and planets. Another part descended towards the center of the galaxy, feeding the galactic egg – a zone of superdense matter where all forces strive for balance.
Among the debris of dying stars, on the surfaces of newly formed planets, the first molecules began to form. In them, supergravitational forces, the same ones that move planets and stars, began to play a role at the subatomic level – organizing the first amino acids into proteins.
Evolution was inevitable. It was not a random process, but the result of magnetic-gravitational resonance, which determined the stable states of molecules. Life was simply another crystallization of the cosmic lattice – from matter to thought, from chaos to harmony.
Gravity was not just an attraction between masses. It was the structure of reality itself, manifested in the attraction of particles, atoms, molecules, stars, planets and even people. Once called the solar wind, the ion stream, or simply electromagnetic radiation, this force was nothing more than the Divine energy that drives the universe.
It was the cause of the orbits of the planets, the curvatures of light around the stars, the invisible streams that connect the galaxies. Every particle felt this connection, obeying the vibrational law of the cosmic grid.
But nothing is eternal. Every few tens of billions of years, the galaxy approached its end. Gravitational interactions in its center gradually attracted everything to the black hole embedded in its core.
This was not destruction, but cyclical renewal. The black hole did not destroy information - it restructured, compacted and prepared it for the next birth. After all the material was absorbed and transformed into an ultra-dense form, a new process began - the birth of a new galaxy.
Space was once again filled with super-heated plasma, forming new hydrogen clouds, new stars, new planets. A new cycle was emerging – with new laws, new forms, but the same primordial energy that once created the first fundamental particles.
So the Universe never dies. It only pulsates.
This is the dance of the BSM-SG – the great cosmic breath.
2025 Victor Pronchev