When Zhao Yi decided to carry out the anti-gravity nuclear experiment, he had only speculated, through his research on space, that spatial barriers might affect nuclear reactions. However, to what extent they would be affected still required actual experiments to draw conclusions.
After conducting the anti-gravity nuclear experiment, the results brought many insights, laying the foundation for subsequent discoveries of spatial shields.
In fact, up to this point, life was confined to the study of photons creating spatial barriers, yet it had not involved the true decoding of space.
Now it was different.
The thirteen sets of formulas relating photons to space had enabled a detailed analysis of their relationship, which in turn allowed Zhao Yi to gain a deeper understanding of space and learn about some of its characteristics.