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Post by Mr. Jon Donnis on Apr 5, 2006 13:58:58 GMT
With a brilliant idea and equations based on Einstein’s relativity theories, Ronald Mallett from the University of Connecticut has devised an experiment to observe a time traveling neutron in a circulating light beam. While his team still needs funding for the project, Mallett calculates that the possibility of time travel using this method could be verified within a decade. Read More
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Post by milkshake on Apr 20, 2006 22:12:23 GMT
That`s amazing & if successful would put a whole new spin on things. 
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Post by miss fairymarymermaid on Apr 21, 2006 11:27:06 GMT
do you think it is possible?
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Post by milkshake on Apr 21, 2006 11:34:45 GMT
I hope so. Imagine the possibilities...
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Post by miss fairymarymermaid on Apr 21, 2006 11:43:14 GMT
i don't know it would be a bit odd. It could change everything!!
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Post by miss fairymarymermaid on Apr 21, 2006 11:43:29 GMT
i always wanted a bernards watch!!
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Post by stormy on Apr 24, 2006 16:51:26 GMT
There might already be time travel. When it's invented i would assume time become irrelevent. Therefore time travevellers could be amongst us already or is it that i have watched too much Dr Who
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Post by *Bemused* on Apr 24, 2006 22:42:17 GMT
I'm not sure it will ever happen but it would be intresting ;D
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Post by Mr. Jon Donnis on Apr 24, 2006 22:54:45 GMT
Time Travel is not possible, as its not been invented yet.
And once its invented you could only ever travel back in time to the point it was invented, as before then it didnt exist
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Post by stormy on Apr 25, 2006 21:14:19 GMT
Why can you only travel back in time?
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Post by Mr. Jon Donnis on Apr 25, 2006 22:23:25 GMT
You can travel forwards to, we already know how to do that.
But you can only travel back in time to the point of when the machine was invented.
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Post by stormy on Apr 28, 2006 16:12:12 GMT
Have to disagree. How do you know that? You just assume that i think.
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Post by Chez on Apr 28, 2006 16:48:01 GMT
Can we do it in a Delorian? 
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Post by stormy on Apr 28, 2006 16:52:04 GMT
or a TARDIS
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Post by Mr. Jon Donnis on Apr 28, 2006 17:46:38 GMT
We can travel into the future, we do it all the time. In fact as I have written this you have travelled 5 seconds into the future
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Post by noddy on May 6, 2006 17:01:04 GMT
If we travelled faster than the speed of light would we exist? Is the 4th dimension in space a way of travelling through time? Could we not expand a worm hole and travel through to the other dimensions? Where do the particles go in quantum mechanics? Is time a man made thing? Is it all pre established within the spectrum of white ligh? So many questions. Lets go and look at the disclosure video and ask the aliens working with the American government.
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Post by bren on May 6, 2006 23:47:18 GMT
"do you think it is possible?"
There are some who think that it has already occurred. Have you read anything regarding Einstein and his theory/association with the Philadelphia Project?
Some people even further this theory by stating that this is what happened to the 6 (I believe 6) airforce planes that disappeared (and were NEVER found) while on a routine flight over the Bermuda Triangle in year (I don't remember, at least 20 years ago).
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Post by bren on May 6, 2006 23:51:09 GMT
I find it interesting that the belief in Kaballah (from 2000+ years ago) states that there are many parallel universes/dimensions. The beliefs are similar to Einstein and his theories.
Would that mean if our loved ones were killed in some type of accident, we could go back in time and prevent it from happening? What about going back in time and preventing wars, Hitler, etc.
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Post by bren on May 7, 2006 0:23:34 GMT
I thought that this was interesting.......
Dr. Michio Kaku, CCNY /CUNY Physics
From Scientific American
In the end, as our universe is dying, will civilization be able to move to another universe? Kaku, professor of theoretical physics at the City University of New York, thinks the possibility of such a transition appears in "the emerging theory of the multiverse--a world made up of multiple universes, of which ours is but one." Our universe is now expanding. "If this antigravity force continues, the universe will ultimately die in a big freeze." That is a law of physics. "But it is also a law of evolution that when the environment changes, life must either leave, adapt, or die." Moving to another universe is one possibility cited by Kaku. Another is that civilization could build a "time warp" and travel back into its own past, to an era before the big freeze. A third is that "an entire civilization may inject its seed through a dimensional gateway and reestablish itself, in its full glory." Kaku is good at explaining the cosmological ideas--among them string theory, inflation, wormholes, space and time warps, and higher dimensions--that underpin his argument.
Editors of Scientific American.
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Post by noddy on May 29, 2006 2:17:39 GMT
String theory has been surpassed by the M theory. But just for academic reasons how do we know that it has not already happened. Maybe the Illumiati or some other allegedly ruling body already know the answers and thus hide it from the masses by claiming other dis-imformation.
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