Thursday, July 25, 2013

Time Travel: Into the Future

By: Tsegazeab Beteselassie


Time travel: This is Time traveling, into the future.
Link:motherboard.vice.com -
 In my last post (if you want to see it click here), we talked about time travel into the past. If you read the asterisk (*)  I wrote, there was another way of time travel but this post has pretty much the same idea. I gave you some clues. Anyways, the second idea of time travel is wormholes. "How?", you might ask? Let me explain.
 

    How can wormholes help us time travel into the future? Well, I'm pretty sure that you know that wormholes connect one point in space or time to another. So if you can make a wormhole that connects this point in time to your desired destination, then you can just step into a swirling vortex into the future (you could also make it to step into the past but that's besides the point*). "And how are you supposed to do that? " you might ask. Well, it's pretty simple once you hear it.
 
    If you read my post Wormholes (click here if you want to see it) a wormhole is technically a black hole. If you step inside the wormhole, you will possibly get destroyed by a black hole. But don't feel bad, cause I have a solution. If you put anti-gravity around the black hole, and put just the right amount of anti-gravity, you could go around the black hole without actually touching it and without shooting out of the wormhole into a very bad situation. So this should be the end of our post right?
Wrong. Because there are still a few problems left.

  "If you travel into the future, how are you supposed to go back to the present time?", you might say. Well, you could just step back into the wormhole, right? But what if you go someplace into the future like an airport and can't remember where the wormhole is? Well, you could always put a tracking device on the wormhole but you might  break the remote for it and anyways, you will have to travel for some time before you find it. So is there no way to fix this problem? Actually, there is. You know when you pack your clothes for a vacation, you put it in a suitcase. What if you could do the same thing for a wormhole? Of course, you can't fit a wormhole inside a suitcase, but if the suitcase were imagined as the space beyond our universe, there will be a monstrous amount of space for all the people in the world to put their wormholes. "But how will it get there?", you might ask. Well we can use wormholes. How? Let me explain.
Wormhole: This is a wormhole.
Link:hendrix2.uoregon.edu 

    Instead of making a long, long wormhole to the end of the universe and beyond, you could just make shorter wormholes "glued" together. Just put the wormholes close together so that the things that they are made of will bond with each other (whatever they are made of). Still, there are storage problems. How are you supposed to put those wormholes at the end of the universe. Well, you don't. Instead of storing them in the space beyond our universe, we could just destroy the wormhole as soon as it's used. "How?", you might ask? Well, first, they break apart. Then, each wormhole will contract and when it is now subatomic and impossible to use, they break apart. But what about the wormhole you just sent beyond our universe?

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Time Travel: Into the Past

By: Tsegazeab Beteselassie



Time Travel: This is an animation of Time Traveling.
Link: litstack.com
    You know all those time travel movies about people going into the past? Well, there is actually a way to do that. Actually, there are two*. You might be wondering, "if there are two ways to time travel into the past*, then why aren't people going into the past right now?" Well, the answer is that they are untested ways and you could be in big trouble if your time machine broke down, you would be in seriously big trouble (trouble as in you might be sent off to a parallel universe). "So what are these ideas anyways?", you might be wondering. Well, let me tell you them.
 


   Well, if you want to know how to time travel, then these are my ideas. My first one came from a movie called NOVA, fabric of the cosmos "The illusion of Time?". It said that if you reversed the polarities of every atom, every particle in the place that was affected (if it was the earth, then it was the earth that was affected), something that happened could go in reverse. And I figured out how to reverse the polarities of the atoms. If you get a magnet, and put it far enough so that particles won't zoom to it, then you can spin it around and the polarities are reversed. However, there is a number of problems with this, however, so I added a little thing of my own. I made it so that you can go to the moment it actually happened. That means that if you make a glass shatter an hour ago, then when you reverse the polarities of the atoms to an hour ago, then you would disappear from the present time and go back an hour ago to stop shattering the glass or whatever you wanted to do an hour ago. Pretty cool, huh? Still, there are problems with this theory.