Wormholes are one of the most fascinating ideas in physics. They are often described as tunnels in space and time that could, in theory, connect distant parts of the universe. While no wormhole has ever been found in real space, scientists still study them using mathematics to understand what Einstein’s theory of gravity allows. A new theoretical work by Herr, Fournier & Hamilton explores a very unusual idea: a wormhole with three separate “necks” in a single, smooth spacetime structure . This is not an engineering discovery or an experimental result. It is a mathematical model based on Einstein’s equations of general relativity. Even so, it is important because it shows new possibilities for how spacetime can be shaped in theory. Where the Idea Comes From The concept of wormholes goes back to 1935, when Albert Einstein and Nathan Rosen studied solutions to Einstein’s equations. They proposed a structure now called the Einstein–Rosen bridge , which connects two regions of spacetime...