The traditional view of the cosmos has been grounded in theories like the Big Bang and Hubble’s Law. However, Scientist Baldevkrishan Sharma introduces a transformative idea through his book Natural Universe Expansion (NUE)—the Living Organic Universe Model.
Rather than imagining the Universe as a cold, mechanical system, NUE suggests it’s an organic, self-regulating entity. Celestial bodies not only move apart but grow in size and mass, maintaining stable ratios of temperature and density. This dynamic model also eliminates the need for dark matter or dark energy to explain cosmic acceleration.
Key to this framework is the Nu Constant, a new value replacing the outdated Hubble constant. Unlike Hubble’s fixed rate, Nu evolves over time—mirroring biological growth patterns.
This idea isn’t just poetic—it’s mathematically substantiated across systems from atoms to galaxies. For example, Sharma argues that the Earth-Moon recession and Earth’s mass increase confirm NUE’s core law. He even links cosmic processes to biological systems, reinforcing the theory’s organic analogy.
For PhD students and researchers in cosmology, this is not just a theory—it’s a new lens. Could the Universe actually be a living system? NUE says yes.
🔗 Explore the full theory at Astrogenesis Research Foundation