LYCOS RETRIEVER
Time Travel: Space
built 294 days ago
A handful of proposals exist for time travel. The most developed of these approaches involves a wormhole—a hypothetical tunnel connecting two regions of space-time. The regions bridged could be two completely different universes or two parts of one universe. Matter can travel through either mouth of the wormhole to reach a destination on the other side.
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Perhaps the most fascinating way to travel though spacetime involves using duty cycles. Although natural biological life-forms cannot take advantage of duty-cycle time traveling, it will apply itself best to cybernetic forms of life. The term "duty cycle" comes from electrical engineering terminology. (No, it does not mean Howdy Doody's bicycle.) A duty cycle represents a periodic ratio of on and off states. Usually duty cycles get represented as square waves or rectangular pulses. If you've ever operated your microwave oven at 50% power, or adjusted the thermostat on your air-conditioner, you'd realize that they operate by turning on for a period of time and off for a period of time.
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By repeating compressing and uncompressing to quantum the initial "particle" creates the illusion of time and space.Time is directly related to the occurrences of the particle in order. And space is related to the particles inability to occupy the same space twice. "ever" as quantum. (since it would meet itself) breaking the original causality law.
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Starts out with a discussion of the use of Radionics in time travel. Shows you how to construct the Demat Cannon which is a type of tachyon particle emitter, the Hyperspace Time Portal, the Multi-verse Resonator which is almost identical to the Hyperdimensional Resonator except it utilizes pyramid energy for additional power, and the highly experimental Space-Time Collector.
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In physics, time is described as a dimension much like length, width, and height. When you travel from your house to the grocery store, you’re traveling through a direction in space, making headway in all the spatial dimensions — length, width and height. But you’re ... traveling forward in time, the fourth dimension.
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It is sometimes argued that time travel violates conservation laws. For example, sending mass back in time increases the amount of energy that exists at that time. Doesn't this violate conservation of energy? This argument uses the concept of a global conservation law, whereas relativistically invariant formulations of the equations of physics only imply local conservation. A local conservation law tells us that the amount of stuff inside a small volume changes only when stuff flows in or out through the surface. A global conservation law is derived from this by integrating over all space and assuming that there is no flow in or out at infinity. If this integral cannot be performed, then global conservation does not follow. So, sending mass back in time might be all right, but it implies that something strange is happening. (Why shouldn't we be able to do the integral?)
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