Archive for the ‘time travel’ category: Page 22
Aug 15, 2016
Four Sets of Identical Twins Staged a Time Travel Prank on an NYC Subway
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: time travel, transportation
Most NYC subway riders are pretty blasé when panhandlers hit them up for cash between stations. When a panhandler announced he was collecting funds to build a time machine, riders chuckled at the odd request—until another man boarded the train and announced he was the inventor’s future self. He implored them not to give any money because time travel will ruin everything.
It sounds just like that X-Files episode (“Synchrony”) where a scientist travels from the future to stop his younger self from making the cryobiological compound that will one day enable time travel. But it’s actually an elaborate prank by Improv Everywhere:
For our latest mission, we staged an elaborate time travel prank on a New York City subway car with four sets of identical twins. A man enters a subway car and announces he is raising money to complete his time machine. At the next stop, his future self enters to try to talk him out of it. More and more time travelers convene on the subway car as the train rolls along, surprising the random commuters caught up in the middle.
Continue reading “Four Sets of Identical Twins Staged a Time Travel Prank on an NYC Subway” »
Jul 31, 2016
How Quantum Mechanics Is Changing Everything We Know About Our Lives
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: neuroscience, quantum physics, time travel
Quantum physics is the new physics that is pointing to something far greater than the materialistic world that we once believed to be the basis of our existence. Not only is it disproving our original perception of space and time, but it is opening the doors to the possibility of time travel, telepathy, and consciousness creating our reality.
Jul 29, 2016
Physicists say time travel could be a reality
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: information science, quantum physics, time travel
Interesting…
However, new research carried out at the University of Waterloo and University of Lethbridge, in Canada, argues there is a much longer measureable minimum unit of time.
If true, the existence of such a minimum time changes the basic equations of quantum mechanics.
Continue reading “Physicists say time travel could be a reality” »
Jul 18, 2016
Physicists Successfully Perform Time Travel Experiment
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: physics, time travel
Scientists have conducted the world’s first successful time travel experiment, proving once and for all that time travel is possible.
Jun 28, 2016
New Form Of Atomic Nuclei Just Confirmed, And it Suggests Time Travel is Impossible
Posted by Phillipe Bojorquez in categories: physics, time travel
A group of scientists confirmed that there is a pear-shaped nucleus. Not only does this violate some laws in physics, but also suggests that time travel is not possible.
A new form of atomic nuclei has been confirmed by scientists in a recent study published in the journal Physical Review Letters. The pear-shaped, asymmetrical nuclei, first observed in 2013 by researchers from CERN in the isotope Radium-224, is also present in the isotope Barium-144.
This is a monumental importance because most fundamental theories in physics are based on symmetry. This recent confirmation shows that it is possible to have a nuclei that has more mass on one side than the other. “This violates the theory of mirror symmetry and relates to the violation shown in the distribution of matter and antimatter in our Universe,” said Marcus Scheck of University of the West of Scotland, one of the authors of the study.
Jun 25, 2016
NASA Wants to Launch Interstellar Space Missions in 20 Years
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: nanotechnology, quantum physics, robotics/AI, space, time travel
The craving to explore beyond our solar system grows sturdier every day. This proves true for the understanding of wormholes and time travel as well. In order to satisfy our thirst for the unknown, NASA will research unknown physics revolutionizing exploration of space. We first have to advance our understanding of space-time, the quantum vacuum, gravity and other physical phenomena. This info will help NASA send robots on interstellar space missions. Precisely 15 areas will be studied comprising human exploration, landing systems, nanotechnology and robots.
May 19, 2016
There’s a Workaround for the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle: Time Travel
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: physics, time travel
May 18, 2016
Can We Receive Messages from the Future?
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: computing, mathematics, quantum physics, time travel
About ten years ago scientist Dave Bacon, now at Google, presented that a time-travelling quantum computer could rapidly solve a bunch of problems, known as NP-complete, which mathematicians have lumped together as being hard. The problem was, Bacon’s quantum computer was travelling around ‘closed timelike curves’. These are paths through the fabric of spacetime that loop back on themselves. General relativity lets such paths to exist through contortions in spacetime identified as wormholes.
Why send a message back in time, but lock it so that no one can ever read the contents? As it may be the key to resolving presently intractable problems. That’s the claim of an international collaboration.
May 15, 2016
Wormholes could be the key to beating the Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, say physicists
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: computing, physics, space, time travel
Time travel seems much more common in science fiction than it is in reality. We’ve never met anyone from the future, after all. But all of the physics we know indicates that wormholes — another science fiction favourite — could really be used to travel backwards in time.
And according to a paper by Chinese physicists, using wormholes for time travel might actually allow us to beat Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle — described as one of the most famous (and probably misunderstood) ideas in physics — and even to solve some of the most difficult problems in computer science.
Wormholes are like portals between two places in the Universe. If you fell in one side, you’d pop out the other immediately, regardless of how far apart the two sides were. But wormholes are also like portals between two times in the Universe. As Carl Sagan liked to say, you wouldn’t just emerge some where else in space, but also some when else in time.