Let me try to explain
this. My work shows us that external to
the universe commencing its existence, the conscious will to exist as consciousness
without content chose to impress content.
This was the first movement that formed our universe and produced time
itself. The inference is that this
conscious will began without knowledge and is with us in the forefront of
knowledge acquisition as the universe self creates itself.
Thus a wormhole can
touch any other part of the universe in both time and space itself. The difficulty is that the value of infinity
itself does change with the internal measure of time. It will get fussier and fussier the further
out you push in either time direction.
However we do have
creditable reports, from observers ignorant of these predicted phenomena, which
are clearly describing what I expect and getting it right as well as confirming
that it is time travel. Most are from
the recent future and are on observation trips.
As well, if other reports do stand up and I can get the protocol into a
lab, we can test the method out easily enough and replicate it.
I find the more
interesting application to be the creation of straight forward wormholes set on
the same time point in order to eliminate global air travel. I suspect that this can be done and I certainly
have a research starting point and a plausible but damaged informant who blew
himself up trying.
Wormhole Is Best Bet
for Time Machine, Astrophysicist Says
Jillian
Scharr, Staff Writer | August 25, 2013
The
concept of a time machine typically conjures up images of an implausible plot
device used in a few too many science-fiction storylines. But according to
Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity, which explains how gravity
operates in the universe, real-life time travel
isn't just a vague fantasy.
Traveling
forward in time is an uncontroversial possibility, according to Einstein's
theory. In fact, physicists have been able to send tiny
particles called muons, which are similar to electrons, forward in time by
manipulating the gravity around them. That's not to say the technology for
sending humans 100 years into the future will be available anytime soon,
though.
Time
travel to the past, however, is even less understood. Still, astrophysicist
Eric W. Davis, of the EarthTech International Institute for Advanced Studies at
Austin, argues that it's possible. All you need, he says, is a wormhole, which is a
theoretical passageway through space-time that is predicted by relativity.
[ this is a bit of a
stretch – arclein – what relativity does is establish the minimal space time
manifold as a core assumption which admits wormholes without destroying the
manifold ]
"You
can go into the future or into the past using traversable wormholes,"
Davis told LiveScience.
Where's
my wormhole?
Wormholes
have never been proven to exist, and if they are ever found, they are likely to
be so tiny that a person couldn't fit inside, never mind a spaceship.
Even
so, Davis' paper, published in July in the American Institute of Aeronautics
and Astronautics' journal, addresses time
machines and the possibility that a wormhole could become, or be used
as, a means for traveling backward in time.
Both
general-relativity theory and quantum theory appear to offer several possibilities
for traveling along what physicists call a "closed, timelike curve,"
or a path that cuts through time and space — essentially, a time machine.
In
fact, Davis said, scientists' current understanding of the laws of physics
"are infested with time machines whereby there are numerous space-time
geometry solutions that exhibit time travel and/or have the properties of time
machines."
A
wormhole would allow a ship, for instance, to travel from one point to another
faster than the
speed of light — sort of. That's because the ship would arrive at its
destination sooner than a beam of light would, by taking a shortcut through
space-time via the wormhole. That way, the vehicle doesn't actually break the
rule of the so-called universal speed limit — the speed of light — because the
ship never actually travels at a speed faster than light.
Theoretically,
a wormhole could be used to cut not just through space, but through time as
well.
"Time
machines are unavoidable in our physical dimensional space-time,"
David wrote in his paper. "Traversable wormholes imply time machines, and
[the prediction of wormholes] spawned a number of follow-on research efforts on
time machines."
However,
Davis added, turning a wormhole into a time machine won't be easy. "It
would take a Herculean effort to turn a wormhole into a time machine. It's
going to be tough enough to pull off a wormhole," he told LiveScience.
That's
because once a wormhole is created, one or both ends of it would need to be
accelerated through time to the desired position, according to general
relativity theory.
Challenges
ahead
There
are several theories for how the laws of physics might work to prevent time travel
through wormholes.
"Not
only do we assume [time travel into the past] will not be possible in our
lifetime, but we assume that the laws of physics, when fully understood, will
rule it out entirely," said Robert Owen, an astrophysicist at Oberlin
College in Ohio who specializes in black holes and gravitation theory.
According
to scientists' current understanding, keeping a wormhole stable enough to
traverse requires large amounts of exotic matter, a substance that is still
very poorly understood.
General
relativity can't account for exotic matter — according to general relativity,
exotic matter can't exist. But exotic
matter does exist. That's where quantum theory comes in. Like general
relativity, quantum theory is a system for explaining the universe, kind of
like a lens through which scientists observe the universe.
However,
exotic matter has only been observed in very small amounts — not nearly enough
to hold open a wormhole. Physicists would have to find a way to generate and
harness large amounts of exotic matter if they hope to achieve this
quasi-faster-than-light travel and, by extension, time travel.
Furthermore,
other physicists have used quantum mechanics to posit that trying to travel
through a wormhole would create something called a quantum back reaction.
In
a quantum back reaction, the act of turning a wormhole into a time machine
would cause a massive buildup of energy, ultimately destroying the wormhole
just before it could be used as a time machine.
However,
the mathematical model used to calculate quantum back reaction only takes into
account one dimension of space-time.
"I
am confident that, since [general relativity] theory has not failed yet, that
its predictions for time machines, warp drives and wormholes remain valid and
testable, regardless of what quantum theory has to say about those
subjects," Davis added.
This
illustrates one of the key problems in theories of time travel: physicists have
to ground their arguments in either general relativity or quantum theory, both
of which are incomplete and unable to encompass the entirety of our complex,
mysterious universe.
Before
they can figure out time travel, physicists need to find a way to reconcile
general relativity and quantum theory into a quantum theory of gravity. That
theory will then serve as the basis for further study of time travel.
Therefore,
Owen argues that it's impossible to be certain of whether time travel is
possible yet. "The wormhole-based time-machine idea takes into account
general relativity, but it leaves out quantum mechanics," Owen added.
"But including quantum mechanics in the calculations seems to show us that
the time machine couldn't actually work the way we hope."
Davis,
however, believes scientists have discovered all they can about time machines
from theory alone, and calls on physicists to focus first on faster-than-light
travel.
1 comment:
I think the evolve of supernatural science could explain things beyond Einstein's theory, making things completely understandable & explainable to human. That's why it could become a science.
Post a Comment