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U.F.O's

46 replies · 7,714 views
over 9 years ago

Yea I think it's a wee bit more than a theory... obviously when he goes into a black hole we can only speculate what that might be like, but in terms of the space-time relationship addressed in the movie e.g when they go to that tidal planet, and the guy left on the ship ages a lot more, that is proven theory now. That stuff is for real - if you travel near a very large mass then the time effect will be very different. 

You can probably google this, but I'm sure some physicists actually recommended that Interstellar be shown in schools, because a lot of the physics in it is explained very well, and very accurately. 

It sounds crazy but basically, physicists now believe that time travel into the future is definitely achievable. We just haven't reached the level of technology just yet i.e. interstellar space travel

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over 9 years ago

paulm wrote:

Yea I think it's a wee bit more than a theory... obviously when he goes into a black hole we can only speculate what that might be like, but in terms of the space-time relationship addressed in the movie e.g when they go to that tidal planet, and the guy left on the ship ages a lot more, that is proven theory now. That stuff is for real - if you travel near a very large mass then the time effect will be very different. 

You can probably google this, but I'm sure some physicists actually recommended that Interstellar be shown in schools, because a lot of the physics in it is explained very well, and very accurately. 

It sounds crazy but basically, physicists now believe that time travel into the future is definitely achievable. We just haven't reached the level of technology just yet i.e. interstellar space travel

That's not so much time travel as it is an illustration of how our everyday experience of time is flawed. Time does not exist independently of the observer, it is physically tied to the observer's frame of reference. Travel at near to the speed of light would create effects which are analogous to time travel into the future from the perspective of observers traveling more slowly but it's not time travel in the popularly understood sense of the phrase (transitioning from one point in history to another without experiencing or physically existing in the intervening period).

Re: real world applicability of those ideas, look no further than GPS. It literally would not work if relativity wasn't taken into account 

http://physicscentral.com/explore/writers/will.cfm

People like Coldplay and voted for the Nazis. You can't trust people.

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over 9 years ago

Very good way of explaining it CT

The more you study and read about this stuff the more mindblowing it gets

Everything I've read about these sorts of things over the last 2-3 years (A LOT) has expanded the mind so much that I now find it a pretty awesome experience simply standing outside on a clear night 

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over 9 years ago · edited over 9 years ago · History

"A free public talk, Is There Life Out There, will be held this Saturday at the Great Barrier Social Club from 2.30pm to 5pm. Panelists include AUT astrobiologist Professor Steve Pointing and Vatican Observatory director Brother Guy Consolmagno. Registration is essential and people can book by emailing awanarw@gmail.com or via the event's Facebook page"

- today's Herald

I'd quite like to go myself - but to the Barrier? In mid winter? Hell, that'd be like catching the ferry to Mars!

"At the end of the drive the lawmen arrive...

I'll take my chance because luck is on my side or something...

Her name is Rio, she don't need to understand...

Oh Rio, Rio, hear them shout across the land..."

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over 9 years ago

Paul check out the wave/particle expierement where the act of observation appears to change the matter. 

It's bizarre.

I'm not convicted Time exists. It's just something we made up.

E's Flat Ah's Flat Too

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