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Interdimensional Mechanics

The branch of physics describing how objects move through the spaces between dimensions, navigating the gaps where normal physical laws don't quite apply. This field explains phenomena like teleportation (briefly exiting our dimensional framework and re-entering at a different point), invisibility (shifting into the gap between dimensions where light doesn't interact), and that weird moment when you walk into a room and forget why (your intention momentarily slipped into the interdimensional gap and hasn't returned). Interdimensional mechanics requires a new kind of mathematics, one that can handle undefined spaces and non-existent coordinates, which is challenging for a field that likes things to be, you know, defined.
Example: "She applied interdimensional mechanics to her morning routine, theorizing that the time she lost between leaving the bedroom and reaching the kitchen was spent traversing the dimensional gap. Her coffee was cold by the time she re-entered normal space, proving that interdimensional travel, while possible, is not efficient."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 15, 2026
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