
What Did the Universe Begin As?
What if the end of the universe is also its beginning? This article explores a radical rethinking of cosmic origin — not from energy or space, but from the first emergence of difference in a perfectly silent field.

Black Holes: The Silence of Collapse
Black holes are often seen as endings — places where matter, light, and even time disappear. But in Chrona, they are something else entirely: not prisons of mass, but zones where collapse fails and information begins again.

Dark Matter: The Loops That Never Settled
Dark matter is one of the biggest puzzles in modern physics — something invisible, yet clearly shaping galaxies and gravity. Chrona offers a new answer: not hidden particles, but uncollapsed loops of memory shaping the universe from the shadows.

Dark Energy: The Silence Between Anchors
The universe isn’t just expanding — it’s accelerating, driven by a force we can’t see or explain. Chrona proposes a surprising answer: not a mysterious energy, but the quiet relaxation of the lattice that once held everything tightly together.

A New Origin: Collapse Before Expansion
The universe is often said to have begun with a bang — a rapid expansion from a single point. But in the Chrona model, it all started when one loop collapsed, forming the first point of reference, and space unfolded from there.