Archive for the ‘time travel’ category: Page 19
Oct 4, 2018
5 Sci-Fi Books Biotech Geeks Should Read Right Now
Posted by Mike Ruban in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI, space travel, time travel
From space colonization to resurrection of dinosaurs to machine intelligence, the most awe-inspiring visions of humanity’s future are typically born from science fiction.
But among an abundance of time travel, superheroes, space adventures, and so forth, biotech remains underrepresented in the genre.
This selection highlights some outstanding works (new and not so new) to fill the sci-fi gap for biotech aficionados.
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Jul 22, 2018
Ask Ethan: Which Movies Get The Science Of Time Travel Right?
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: entertainment, science, time travel
It’s one of the most common tropes in science fiction. But which movies actually get the science right?
May 28, 2018
Scientists invented a real-life flux capacitor, but not for time travel
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: education, time travel
If you watched Back to the Future over the holiday weekend and wished the flux capacitor was a real thing so you could travel through time, we have sorta good news. Scientists from Australia and Switzerland have proposed a real-life flux capacitor — but you won’t be able to travel back to a high school dance in the ’50s with it.
The device is a new type of electronic circulator, which can control the directional movement of microwave signals. The scientists, who published their research in Physical Review Letters, have proposed two different potential circuits — one of them borrows the design of the three-pointed flux capacitor Doc Brown and Marty McFly used to travel to 1955 and 2015 in their DeLorean.
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May 26, 2018
[1805.03035] Time travel in vacuum spacetimes
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: information science, time travel
The possibility of time travel through the geodesics of vacuum solutions in first order gravity is explored. We present explicit examples of such geometries, which contain degenerate as well as nondegenerate tetrad fields that are sewn together continuously over different regions of the spacetime.
These classical solutions to the field equations satisfy the energy conditions.
Feb 24, 2018
Physicists Have Confirmed a Pear-Shaped Nucleus, And It Could Ruin Time Travel Forever
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: cosmology, physics, space travel, time travel
Physicists have confirmed the existence of a new form of atomic nuclei, and the fact that it’s not symmetrical challenges the fundamental theories of physics that explain our Universe.
But that’s not as bad as it sounds, because the 2016 discovery could help scientists solve one of the biggest mysteries in theoretical physics — where is all the dark matter? — and could also explain why travelling backwards in time might actually be impossible.
Nov 16, 2017
Traveling back in time could be possible, physicist says
Posted by John Gallagher in categories: cosmology, particle physics, robotics/AI, time travel, transportation
As the common tropes of science fiction continue to break out into reality, from humanoid robots to self-driving cars, there’s one concept that has seemingly remained beyond our grasp: time travel.
But, jumping through time might not be impossible, after all, according to one astrophysicist.
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Sep 28, 2017
Traversable acausal retrograde domains in spacetime
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: time travel
This was the second scholarly paper i saw this year about time travel. Posting because there isn’t nearly enough serious interest about Time Travel in the science community.
Traversable acausal retrograde domains in spacetime.
Benjamin K Tippett1 and David Tsang2
Published 31 March 2017 •
Abstract
In this paper we present geometry which has been designed to fit a layperson’s description of a ‘time machine’. It is a box which allows those within it to travel backwards and forwards through time and space, as interpreted by an external observer. Timelike observers travel within the interior of a ‘bubble’ of geometry which moves along a circular, acausal trajectory through spacetime. If certain timelike observers inside the bubble maintain a persistent acceleration, their worldlines will close.
Sep 7, 2017
Unexpected Futurist: Ben Franklin envisions 2776 — and Cryonics
Posted by Johnny Boston in categories: aging, cryonics, education, entertainment, futurism, health, human trajectories, innovation, media & arts, science, time travel
In Unexpected Futurist, we profile the lesser known futurist side of influential individuals. This episode’s unexpected time-traveler: Benjamin Franklin. Ben Franklin was an inventor, observer, electricity pioneer, and serial experimenter, so it’s not entirely surprising he looked to the future. But it turns out he was looking to the far, far future. In 1780 he wrote a letter to a friend in which he lamented that he was born during the dawn of science.