There is an article in the August
– September issue of Nexus Magazine that is important and I cannot provide a
copy here for you to read. The title is
Mike Marcum’s Time Machine Experiments.
Mark was a young geek who got
into mucking around with rigging up a Jacob’s ladder with transformers and
working in laser technology. I suspect
he did not know quite what he was trying to accomplish.
What he did accomplish on a desk
top set up was the production of a small dime size heat ball that floated above
the arcs that he was running. He tossed
a small screw into the ball and it disappeared only to reappear a few feet away
on his table.
This story got told to Art Bell
and this attracted donations in terms of ample hardware. So our hero proceeded to make a giant device
and arrange a power supply and this produced a heat sphere some four feet
across. After throwing objects and a few
test critters into the device and then locating same some distance away, he got
reckless and jumped in himself and promptly disappeared from the known world.
This happened in 1998.
In fact he reappeared eight
hundred miles away and two years later (2000) was suffering from what must be
described as a mind wipe. This took place over a decade ago and he has since
had substantial mental recovery although much detail in terms of specific day
to day from the time and place is missing.
This past decade was spent obviously in survival mode but he did
eventually make contact and this has led to the article in Nexus.
Of course what he did was bone
dumb, but then his background lacked the necessary training that would have
warned him off. At the very least his
head needed to be encased in a Faraday cage when he went into that sphere.
More critically the device does
work on the lab top and plenty of obvious experiments needed to be conducted
there were it was obviously safe enough.
He really had seen too many Dr Who shows.
Now we address the important
question. What did we observe? Quite simply this is a worm hole. It is even formed somewhat in the manner that
I expected might actually work although my own considerations would have looked
for a much more complex assembly to play with.
I was looking to produce a toroidal field with also high currents and
voltage with slim hope of success in the early going. Stumbling onto it is a
much better plan.
The real surprise is that he got
it to exist so easily and that it is actually stable. We still know nothing about it but we can now
start to learn. He also demonstrated
that its effect clearly varies as to the mass passed into it and that in the
uncontrolled form the exit is shifted in both space and time. A surprise is that it at least appears to
adhere to the local curvature regime or at least attaches itself to the ground
at the exit. Otherwise anything passing
through would likely have dropped out of the sky.
First rule for future investigation. Do not look a gift horse in the mouth. Most likely we will learn to control this
phenomenon and provide transport links with it.
The time component is inconvenient but there is no evidence that it goes
backwards so far.
We now know that the device
produces an exit point that is mass dependent.
That exit point falls to the ground during the process which is nice to
have. Whether it also swings around
randomly or anything like that remains to be discovered.
The next step is to set up a
table top system and to try feeding conductive and also nonconductive wire
through it to determine what may happen.
At that point all sorts of additional tests may be conducted. We should soon have an extensive lab book on
the phenomenon that could then inform us on how to manage the behavior.
And you believe this because???
ReplyDeleteIt is never a matter of belief. We have a curious report that partially conforms to other curious reports and which is providing a lot of new information. A whole picture is described which is self consistent.
ReplyDeleteThat leaves us two choices. the easy out is to show that it is fiction in whole or in part.
The second option is to accept validity of the report and continue to ferret out confirmation if such exists.
Far more important is that the narrative itself points us to specific evidence not looked at in the past. AS an example, certain fossils need a second look we would never have given them.