Accepting that we do live in a multiverse, where maybe there are the same number of universes as there are worlds, we need to consider that everyone will presumably have diverse physical laws and properties. As University of Michigan physicist Fred Collins and his associates say in their paper on arXiv, one of the real contrasts may be in every universe’s “abundancy of primordial thickness vacillations,” known as Q for short. Essentially, Q depicts the contrast in the middle of thick and unfilled areas of space – for this situation, in a universe. A high Q implies there are high changes, with to a great degree thick zones and amazingly purge territories. In our universe, Q isn’t too high, which is the reason we have a considerable measure of matter spread out all around, with enormous spaces in the middle of stars and systems. However, suppose it is possible that we lived in a universe with a high Q, and our universes were far denser than they are in this universe. Most importantly, stars would be greatly near one another so you’d be getting daylight from all around – not simply from your neighborhood star. It may be a great deal more hazardous, with more titan rocks zooming around and crushing into things, and more stars crashing into one another in super blasts. Be that as it may, this sort of high Q universe would likewise be much hotter and more neighborly than our present ones. Indeed, it is conceivable that you could live on a free-coasting planet simply kind of floating around the world, washed in the light of several close-by stars. Ruth Angus expounds on the paper on Astrobites: There is another open door for systems with a higher Q than our own. In the event that stars are only the right separation separated that all the free-drifting planets in the world are showered in tender, warming radiation, a planet won’t even need a host star to be in the ‘tenable zone’! There could possibly be a huge number of free-skimming, livable planets, warmed simply by starlight. These planets would should be sufficiently far from the galactic focus that they evade impacts and compelling radiation, yet not so far that they aren’t sufficiently warmed by starlight. They have to lie in, what the creators call, the ‘Galactic Habitable Zone’. So you may have an a great deal more tenable world than we have at this time. Life could develop anyplace, notwithstanding floating between the stars.