There Are 6 "Errors" In The Universe... And Physics Has No Answers

Six fundamental problems in physics that no scientist on Earth can solve. From dark energy to dark matter, from quantum measurement to the arrow of time, the deepest foundations of reality are broken. In the late 1990s, two teams discovered the universe is accelerating apart. Nobody expected it. Nobody can explain it. The energy driving this acceleration makes up 68% of everything that exists, and physics has no mechanism, no particle, no field to account for it. The two best theories disagree on its value by a factor of 10 to the 120th power — the largest mismatch in the history of science. And that number determines whether the universe freezes, rips apart, or crushes back into a point. The Standard Model runs on 26 numbers typed in by hand. Not one is derived. Every margin is impossibly tight. Fred Hoyle predicted a nuclear resonance from the bare fact that carbon exists — and found it at exactly 7.6 MeV. He spent the rest of his life unable to explain why the prediction worked. At the quantum scale, a single particle passes through two slits at once — until someone records which path it took. Wheeler's delayed-choice experiment proved the past is not fixed until the measurement is complete. Bell's theorem proved the world is not both local and real. Fifteen interpretations of quantum mechanics exist. None can be distinguished by experiment. The arrow of time is not in any equation. Boltzmann showed entropy is statistics, not law. Penrose calculated the probability of our low-entropy beginning: 1 in 10^10^123 — a number larger than the universe it describes. Entanglement ignores distance. ER=EPR says space is woven from quantum connections. Information cannot be destroyed. Landauer proved erasing one bit costs heat. Bekenstein proved the universe has a maximum memory. The holographic principle says the third dimension is computed from a surface. String theory promised one equation for everything. It produced 10^500 possible universes and zero testable predictions. Its own Swampland conjecture may rule out the cosmos we observe. 85% of all matter is invisible. Fifty years of detectors, three generations of experiments, billions of dollars — zero particles found. MOND fits the data but breaks on clusters. Neither model works. Neither can be ruled out. The equations hold. The floor is solid. But underneath it, at every level, the supports are missing.