Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all

Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #226, on July 30th, 2018, 09:34 AM »
Right now I'm trying to wrap my head around W.B Smith's The New Science, much like what I did years ago when I bought Einstein's books on relativity.

I think it's abolutely imperative to keep an open mind if we're ever going to stand a chance of reaching the stars within our own lifetime.
Take the best of what we already know, apply it to the task at hand and then just go completely outside the box to find the remaining pieces of this puzzle.

As such, feel free to share what's on your mind, be it actual builds, theories, fiction, fantasy, whatever :-)

Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #227, on July 30th, 2018, 11:57 AM »
If something travels through space, like a spaceship then for example, while time is at standstill for the ship and it's crew, and everything else aboard ship for that matter, would the physical properties of everything aboard ship stay intact then, regardless of whatever comes in it's way, as long as time remains at standstill aboard ship?

Matt Watts

The Aether is Real
« Reply #228, on July 30th, 2018, 01:24 PM »Last edited on July 30th, 2018, 07:00 PM
Quote from PeakPositive on July 29th, 2018, 08:23 PM
At the end of video Martin Grusenick also finds the Ether field does exist.
Haha!   If I was Mr. Tesla at the time when the first experiment was conducted, I would have stated, "Try it vertically there smart-boy and see what you get."    :-D
Quote from Lynx on July 30th, 2018, 09:34 AM
Right now I'm trying to wrap my head around W.B Smith's The New Science, much like what I did years ago when I bought Einstein's books on relativity.
Should have saved your money on Einstein's publications.

What Mr. Smith tells us is that gravity is a hybrid combination of the tempic and electric fields.  Martin's experiment clearly shows us this.  Take this concept further and separate the electric from the tempic and you'll have a device that not only is a time machine, but a self-powered anti-gravitic one as well.

Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #229, on July 30th, 2018, 09:32 PM »
Quote from Matt Watts on July 30th, 2018, 01:24 PM
Haha!   If I was Mr. Tesla at the time when the first experiment was conducted, I would have stated, "Try it vertically there smart-boy and see what you get."    :-D

Should have saved your money on Einstein's publications.

What Mr. Smith tells us is that gravity is a hybrid combination of the tempic and electric fields.  Martin's experiment clearly shows us this.  Take this concept further and separate the electric from the tempic and you'll have a device that not only is a time machine, but a self-powered anti-gravitic one as well.
Will take some time to get the gist of his theory, but hopefully I'll be able to start seeing things his way soon enough.
Speaking of time, in theory then, if a local "timeframe" were to have slowed down it's, in lack of better words, pace of time, making a clock tick ridiculously slow compared to a clock in the next "normal" timeframe, would all physical properties for both energy and matter remain intact in this painfully slow timeticking environment then?

Matt Watts

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #230, on July 31st, 2018, 06:25 AM »Last edited on July 31st, 2018, 06:45 AM
If you can get your head wrapped around the concept of everything being composed of three primordial fields, the density & intensity of these fields can be distributed in many different ways/combinations.  The fields themselves like to operate at right angles to each other--that's really the only basic rule they have.  In totality, it's really a very limitless construct and solves all the current paradoxes, time being just one aspect.

My gut feeling is that when the local tempic field changes, matter and energy simply restructures itself to accommodate the change; whether it remains intact or not...?   I couldn't say.  Some things probably do and other things possibly can't retain their geometric structure and come apart.  Mr. Smith talks about binding forces which gives us a clue as to how this effects matter.

Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #231, on July 31st, 2018, 09:28 AM »
Quote from Matt Watts on July 31st, 2018, 06:25 AM
If you can get your head wrapped around the concept of everything being composed of three primordial fields, the density & intensity of these fields can be distributed in many different ways/combinations.  The fields themselves like to operate at right angles to each other--that's really the only basic rule they have.  In totality, it's really a very limitless construct and solves all the current paradoxes, time being just one aspect.

My gut feeling is that when the local tempic field changes, matter and energy simply restructures itself to accommodate the change; whether it remains intact or not...?   I couldn't say.  Some things probably do and other things possibly can't retain their geometric structure and come apart.  Mr. Smith talks about binding forces which gives us a clue as to how this effects matter.
Alright, interesting :thumbsup:

The reason to why I ask is that right now I have a more or less fixed idea on the seemingly impossible condition that if time is brought to a "standstill" aboard ship then the ship and everything aboard it won't be affected by acceleration, change of ship's direction, smashing into comets, etc etc, as "nothing" changes because how could it, if time is "frozen" aboard ship while it's travelling around, provided that the incidents that happens doesn't "start up" time again aboard ship of course.
That would also explain why inertia wouldn't have any impact on ship's crew if, for arguments sake, the ship would turn 90 degrees from one passing moment to the nex while travelling at "quite the speed" at the same time.

Just playing a mindgame here, that's all.

Matt Watts

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #232, on July 31st, 2018, 12:24 PM »Last edited on July 31st, 2018, 12:27 PM
Something Otis Carr mentions is that when time runs at a different speed, it plays quite the tricks on your mind.

Supposedly when he beta-tested his OTC-X1 spacecraft, he had some fellows take a "quick" ten minute journey and back.  Not any great distance.  One of the guys tells a story in which they could not remember it happening, but when asked specific questions about tasks they performed while "in flight", they remember doing the tasks and the results of the tasks.  It's as though the part of your brain that indexes all your experiences can't associate events between different time speeds.  The information is there, but the link doesn't get recorded.  From the descriptions it sounds very much like growing a split personality.  The brain has a very difficult time reconciling non-linear time progression.

I have no idea if any of the above is true or not.  I just remember hearing the story and thought it was interesting.  Seems logical to me organic creatures might have a few neurological issues with events such as time travel.  You spend the majority of your life exposed to a very lady-like linear progression of time and then go on a trip in a space vehicle that quite literally warps time in a way you have never been exposed to before, I would suspect one to have some freakiness afterwards.

I do think any biological creature could overcome this phenomena and learn to become rather skillful at time travel.  It would just take some work to peace together all the experiences in some manner that returns sanity.  And heck, if creatures are doing this in their travels to earth, there must be a way to learn how to deal with it.

Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #233, on July 31st, 2018, 12:50 PM »
Quote from Matt Watts on July 31st, 2018, 12:24 PM
Something Otis Carr mentions is that when time runs at a different speed, it plays quite the tricks on your mind.

Supposedly when he beta-tested his OTC-X1 spacecraft, he had some fellows take a "quick" ten minute journey and back.  Not any great distance.  One of the guys tells a story in which they could not remember it happening, but when asked specific questions about tasks they performed while "in flight", they remember doing the tasks and the results of the tasks.  It's as though the part of your brain that indexes all your experiences can't associate events between different time speeds.  The information is there, but the link doesn't get recorded.  From the descriptions it sounds very much like growing a split personality.  The brain has a very difficult time reconciling non-linear time progression.

I have no idea if any of the above is true or not.  I just remember hearing the story and thought it was interesting.  Seems logical to me organic creatures might have a few neurological issues with events such as time travel.  You spend the majority of your life exposed to a very lady-like linear progression of time and then go on a trip in a space vehicle that quite literally warps time in a way you have never been exposed to before, I would suspect one to have some freakiness afterwards.

I do think any biological creature could overcome this phenomena and learn to become rather skillful at time travel.  It would just take some work to peace together all the experiences in some manner that returns sanity.  And heck, if creatures are doing this in their travels to earth, there must be a way to learn how to deal with it.
I think you've just described a, however yet to come, ailment which comes from such journeys, Time Distorted Memory Disorder, soon to be known as  TIDIMED.

Much like the way austronauts suffers muscle fatigue upon re entering Earths atmosphere or sailors leaves their ship walking around on dry land seemingly drunk even though they're sober as a mule.

It's just a matter of practice.
The more trips you take, the easier it gets.

Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #234, on July 31st, 2018, 01:49 PM »
No objections with regards to if it could be OK to "stop" time from ticking in and around ship while it's jumping through hyperspace?

So to recap then it's
1) Shield ship from it's on board wormhole generator
2) Crunch "empty" space from here to Alpha Centauri using ship's wormhole generator
3) Move the ship a tiny bit into the wormhole
4) Slow down time to next to nothing aboard ship
5) Shut off wormhole generator
6) Enjoy the ride while it lasts, which will seem to take like 1 minute for a stationary observer but for crew onboard ship it will seem like no time at all
7) A timer onboard ship will get time ticking "normally" again at the end of the trip, enabling everyone aboard ship to gaze into a new star, quite similar to our own star in many ways actually
8 )  Marvel at the way the ship has moved from Earth to Alpha Centaury in virtually no time at all while not breaking any laws of physics

Feel free to add and/or remove things from the list.


Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #236, on August 2nd, 2018, 09:45 AM »
Some extracts on 2 aspects of mr. Smith's work, the Tempic field and the Binding force.
If any, this is what I'd like to experiment with using for example Caduceus coils in various configurations and setups, just to see what gives.
Who knows, maybe I'll get lucky and strike some interesting frequencies along the way.
As always, should effects be seen that which could prove to be important later on then Open Source holds the key to real success for all of us.

Matt Watts

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #237, on August 2nd, 2018, 10:21 AM »
Just FYI, I did experiment with the caduceus coil, but later found out you need to hit the coil with a minimum amount of power in order for it to work.  I also didn't have a radio frequency bridge which Mr. Smith mentions as having a very curious result.  Apparently a caduceus coil won't balance when connected to a RF bridge.

Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #238, on August 2nd, 2018, 10:27 AM »
Ok, thanks for the heads up :thumbsup:
I'm also thinking about putting together a Binding meter using a nylon thread, spring, aluminum tube, etc, the way it's described in The Binding Force extracts document.
If the Caduceus coil were to exert yet-to-be-discovered effects then I guess a Binding meter could come in handy aswell ;-)

Matt Watts

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #239, on August 2nd, 2018, 10:52 AM »
Yeah, I was considering building one of those binding force meters too.  There are a couple of places in my neck of the woods where strange things happen.  It would be nice to see if the binding force meter tells the story.




Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #243, on August 3rd, 2018, 01:33 PM »
Quote from Matt Watts on July 28th, 2018, 08:17 AM
I just keep imagining this one populated with Caduceus and electromagnetic coils, together with some electric fields, powered with closed looped resonant circuits governed by load cells, binding force meter actuated potentiometers........and then some.
I like the center coil, it mimics........spin.........somehow.




Lynx

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #247, on August 3rd, 2018, 11:41 PM »
I hear you.

I would love to get some basic most workbench started with winding coils, trying out frequencies, try to get a binding force meter to move it's dial, see if a 1 pound rock by any chance would register less on a couple of load cells, see if light would shine any differently through 2 polarized sunglasses mounted perpendicular to eachother, etc etc.

If only one such setup were to yield any such result I'm guessing we'd be able to get however many more start tinkering with this.

From then on............who knows :-)


Matt Watts

Re: Abstract workshop challenge: Travel to the stars in no time at all
« Reply #249, on August 5th, 2018, 04:18 PM »Last edited on August 5th, 2018, 04:27 PM
http://www.mauricecotterell.com/
Quote
In 2011 he published FUTURESCIENCE—forbidden science of the 21st–century, which explains how Gravity works and much more: The nature of Dark Matter; the reason why spiral galaxies are spiral shaped; the reason why the Earth’s core is red-hot; the cause of global-warming-and-cooling; how gravity waves can be generated and used to provide unlimited supplies of free energy; how antigravity waves can be used in place of electrolysis to produce unlimited supplies of free hydrogen, to power vehicles; and, how antigravity waves can be used to cause the disintegration of hydrogen-containing matter [phasor weapons technology]. It also describes how Electricity works at atomic level and why a magnetic field is produced when a current flows, why the field is proportional to current flow, and why the field is 90° to the direction of current; how magnetism works, at atomic level; and the cause of permanent magnetism.
Definitely worth gathering some insight here.  Maybe another piece of the puzzle solved...