Science, asked by christycherian703, 4 months ago

Can anyone help me finish building my teleporter-time machine? I am not able to convince scientists as they think my machine is a trick.

I have already teleported myself to Sahara and back again.
I have tried to time travel and it turned out to be a success but the problem is that I am to able to get back to my original time. I am stuck 1 hour behind than I am actually supposed to be.
Can anyone help me to get back to my actual time?
The machine vanished and I located it's present location in 29 May 2020, in Kerala.

I am not able to bring it back to me.
Pls, support me by bringing me a piece of any asteroid that fell on Earth at least 2 days from crash.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:Travelling in time might sound like a flight of fancy, but some physicists think it might really be possible. BBC Horizon looked at some of the most promising ideas for turning this staple of science fiction into reality.

Ron Mallett has a dream: He wants to travel in time.

This isn't mere fantasy - Mallett is a respected professor of physics.

"I think of myself as being an ordinary person with a passion, and my passion is the possibility of time travel," he says.

Prof Mallett has wanted to build a time machine for most of his life. His passion, he explains, can be traced to a tragic event early in his life.

Ron's father, a heavy smoker, died of a heart attack at the age of 33 - when Prof Mallett was just 10 years of age. Ron was devastated and withdrew into his books.

"A year after that when I was 11, I came across the book that changed everything for me. That was The Time Machine, by HG Wells," the University of Connecticut physicist told the BBC's Horizon programme.

"The cover caught my attention, but it was when I read the inside, and it said: 'Scientific people know very well that time is just a kind of space and that we can move forward and backwards in time, just as we can… in space'.

"When I read that I said: 'This is wonderful!'."

Prof Mallett explains: "If I could build a time machine, then I could go back into the past and see my father again and maybe save his life and change everything."

Explanation:Time travel may sound far-fetched, but scientists are already exploring several mysteries of nature that could one day see Ron's dream fulfilled.

Albert Einstein thought the three dimensions of space were linked to time - which serves as a fourth dimension. He called this system space-time, and it's the model of the Universe that we use today.

But Einstein also thought it was possible to fold space-time, creating a shortcut between two distant locations. This phenomenon is called a wormhole, and it can be visualised as a tunnel with two openings, each emerging at different points in space-time.

Wormholes might exist naturally in the cosmos; indeed, scientists in Russia are trying to use radio telescopes to detect them. But using wormholes for time travel won't be straightforward.

Answered by MissRostedKaju
4

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Can anyone help me finish building my teleporter-time machine?

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Impossible! In 1993 an international group of six scientists, showed that perfect teleportation is possible in principle, or at least not against the laws of physics. ... Just last year, Chinese scientists were able to “teleport” photons to a satellite 300 miles away, using a phenomenon called “quantum entanglement”.

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