
|
Jackanapes rated 21 months ago- Wow thanks to my Pässodine sterile bit quantum computer I can post about one of the articles that started the whole time wide web neutrino space time communication network. The beauty is that for you it is the present. Funny how that term will change meaning soon.
|
|
6 Reviews
-
-
 coolbus rated 21 months ago- time travel.read this and warp your mind.
 idleCycle rated 21 months ago- Theoretical physicist Heinrich Päs and his team suggest a new approach to time travel. Very interesting concept, but also very speculative.
 Xstealth rated 21 months ago- As concepts for the prospects of "time travel" move foward, our present-day technologies have yet to allow us to exist in either the past or future.
 Jackanapes rated 21 months ago- Wow thanks to my Pässodine sterile bit quantum computer I can post about one of the articles that started the whole time wide web neutrino space time communication network. The beauty is that for you it is the present. Funny how that term will change meaning soon.
 Uru rated 21 months ago- Fortunately, no one has ever seen a String, or even knows if they exist and I wouldn't worry because the Time Machine theory will bounce back and forth for many years to come, like everything else about Physics.
 starspirit rated 21 months ago- From the page: "The title of Heinrich Päs's latest paper might not mean much to you. To those who know their theoretical physics, however, "Closed timelike curves in asymmetrically warped brane universes" contains a revelation. It suggests that time machines might be far more common than we ever thought possible.
Forget trawling the universe in search of rotating black holes or exotic wormhole tunnels that could supposedly let us hop from one instant to another. According to Päs, a physicist at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and his colleagues, the door to a time machine could be anywhere and everywhere in our universe. And unlike most other scenarios for time travel, we can test this one here on Earth. "I think the ideas presented are wonderful and exciting," says Bill Louis, a physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico and co-spokesperson for the MiniBoone neutrino experiment at Fermilab, near Chicago. "The question is are they true or not."
Louis is right to be cautious. Although nothing in the laws of nature appears to rule out time travel, physicists have always been uneasy about it because it makes a mockery of causality, the idea that cause always precedes effect. Violating causality would play havoc with the universe, for instance, allowing you to travel back in time and prevent your own birth."
|