The cosmological constant c
299792458 m/s
The cosmological constant c is not the fastest thing in the SUSY inversion universe. The generation of c occurs during the inflationary phase of the universe, and it is a byproduct of the velocity of alpha particle emission from the He-BEC singularity. The alpha particle emission is 9.97 times faster than c.
As the universe inflates the velocity of v decreases which results in the tension between different speeds. This tension of velocities means that positron and electron pairs generated come from the average of v^3 and c^3 corresponding to the ionization energy of an electron in hydrogen.
The difference between inward and outward speeds is balanced to maintain the equal and opposite balanced expansionary process. As the speed decays away, it generates a specific relationship between the speed of light c and pi squared (3.1415)^2 . It is the tension where two particles form and they are created from the vacuum through the expansionary process.
The separation of the speed of v and c given (v/c = 9.97), and the square root gives Pi x Pi.
This model provides a context for the speed of light as well as particle formation via the decrease in velocity during the expansionary phase of the universe. The faster than light process gives a negative time dilation, which provides a time reversal symmetry process, and this relates to an observable reality travelling backwards in time and not forwards.
I talk about times directional properties on another page if you are interested in learning about time travel conceptual framework connected to memory formation and memory recall.
The dark matter 27%, dark energy 68% and matter 5% are produced over a period of 13.8 billion years arising from the initial 75% dark energy and 25% dark matter. This originates from the helium Bose Einstein Condensate.
Calculations
(SQRT v + 1/alpha) / (SQRT c + 1/alpha) = Pi
(SQRT v + 1/alpha)/ Pi = SQRT c + 1/alpha
(SQRT v + 1/alpha)/ Pi - 1/alpha = SQRT c
(SQRT v + 1/alpha)/ Pi - 1/alpha * (SQRT v + 1/alpha)/ Pi - 1/alpha = c
We can therefore understand that c is able to be generated from the process that results in Pi formation. We can understand that we can explore how differential velocity of v and c is able to generate Pi particles. There are four of these that are created during the inward trajectory in the generation of dark matter.