Time Experiments: Articles
Time Experiments: Articles
Time Experiments: Articles
Time Experiments
Desislava Tomova
Free Time
Column: stage space
The machine that takes us now to the future, now to the past,
exists, , owing to a few eccentric and of course brilliant scientists.
Theories and evidence by Desislava Tomova
What do we mean by "time"?
The definition goes, "Time is a continuous change of phenomena and
matter states irreversible and at a regular pace, it proceeds from
the past to the future". However, is this enough, considering the
evolution of knowledge in recent years? Rather not...
During the 20th century, Einsteins General Theory of Relativity served as a cornerstone in
the explanation of many physical phenomena. Kurt Godel, a colleague of Albert Einsteins,
used it to arrive at the idea of time travel and prove the theoretical
possibility of returning to the past.
However, our reality which brims with miraculous phenomena and
statistics cannot be explained unambiguously. The number of sceptics
in the world of science is always growing. This does not imply denial
but expansion and creation of a new theory aimed at justifying other
states and phenomena occurring under supergravity and faster-thanlight velocities, demonstrating multidimensional states, and inevitably
leading to concepts such as "dark matter", "hyperspace", "thin
energies", etc.
Let us look ... back in time
The year is 1943, the month, August. According to news in the press, the US Navy carry out
an experiment in Philadelphia named "Project Rainbow" using the U.S.S. Eldridge destroyer.
The experiment is based on Nikola Tesla and Albert Einsteins research. The idea is to make
the ship invisible to radars. The vessel becomes enshrouded in a mystical green glow and
not only turns invisible but also briefly appears in another, quite
distant place. It moves from Philadelphia to the Norfolk Naval Base.
Curious and mysterious things happen to its crew as well: some crew
members appear 40 years after their disappearance, not in
Philadelphia but on Long Island. In the 1950s and 1960s, Italian priest
and theologian Alfredo Ernetti studied ancient music and in his
attempts to restore lost parts of old musical pieces, decided to use the
Pythagoras-old statement that each study played and speech given
are recorded as information in a certain field whch was later called
"akashic records" by esoteric writers and "information matrix" by
scientists. It has been recorded that Father Ernetti succeeded in
building a time machine and using it to a certain extent. Wernher von
Braun, a renowned rocket constructor and scientist, has been
mentioned as his collaborator. Over a period of 40 years, a total of twelve scientists
participated in the various phases of the experiment. The machine was named Chronovisor.
In the 1970s, the experiments gradually ceased. It seems unlikely that the Vatican
"silenced" Ernetti. According to American writer.Baird Spalding, Ernettis device was built
and actively used.
Kozyrevs mirrors
The research and experiments carried out by the professor in the
Pulkovo Observatory went beyond purely theoretical conclusions and
analysis. Kozyrev developed a complete and original theory of time,
considering it not as a mathematical quantity (a scalar) but as being
closely related to the physical system and in particular to matter,
since space has physical properties besides its geometric ones.
According to Kozyrev, time is energy capable of concentrating
(shrinking) or dispersing (extending). He was actually able to achieve
the time shrinking effect. His experiment with mirrors built as cylindric
spirals, with people inside, had remained unfathomable even to this
day. Volunteers who subjected themselves to Kozyrevs mirrors were
recorded to have had various anomalous psycho-physical sensations. They sensed "going
out of their own bodies", fits of telekinesis, telepathy and even conveying thoughts from a
distance. One of the goals was to study and train human abilities for clairvoyance,
predicting future events, delving into past ones. According to the data gathered, these
abilities increased sharply while staying inside the experimental set-up. Kozyrev explained
the phenomena thus, "Inside the mirror rooms, time density changes,
which sharpens extrasensory perception". People who spent a few
hours inside the set-up started feeling like participants in long-gone
historical events and saw familiar and completely unfamiliar
happenings as if on a screen. The workings of the interaction between
the mirrors, time and human consciousness are yet to be studied, and
it is still impossible to say whether participants in the experiment get
transported to the actual events of the past or this is a reflection of
these events (a chronomirage) coming to us in the present.
The Kailash Time Machine
A far more grandiose effect than Kozyrevs mirrors has been investigated by Russian
scientist and remarkable ophthalmologist Ernest Muldashev and described in his publication
"In Search of the City of Gods". In 1999, a group of scientists came across the largest
formation of pyramids ever, situated in Tibet on the sacred Kailash Mount. The travellers
beheld unsuspected and mysterious sights. They counted over 100 pyramids and various
monuments encircling a central pyramid 6714 m tall. Against the pyramids, one could see
stone structures with concave or flat surfaces which resemble stone mirrors. The scientists
had reasons to believe that the enormous stone "mirrors" exerted some effect on the
characteristics of time. Professor Muldashev, head of the expedition, gave an interview
about the wonder of the millennium called Tibetan pyramids. A rigorous mathematical
regularity links them to the Egyptian and Mexican pyramids as well as Easter Island,
Stonehenge and the North Pole.
According to Kozyrev, time is energy capable of being concentrated (shrunk) or dispersed
(extended). His experiments demonstrate the time shrinking effect. We may therefore
assume that the "stone mirrors" in Tibet have the same property. This is a possible
explanation for the peculiar death of the four climbers who somehow grew old within a year.
They may have experienced the effect of the "mirrors". We must also mention that
according to many scientists, the pyramids are capable of concentrating "thinner" types of
energy, and combined with the "mirrors of time", they may exert a strong influence on the
space-time continuum that is why the Kailash complex has been called a "time machine".
Unfortunately, contemporary science is only now beginning to realise that such energies
exist and does not yet have the tools and devices to study them. We can only say that the
ones who built the Kailash mirror pyramidal complex were aware of the laws of time and
thin energies and capable of controlling them. These energies are probably "formotropic",
that is, they depend on the shape of the structure.
Can we screen the passage of time?
Kozyrev responds positively. The time-registering system can be
insulated from the processes around. All sorts of solid substances can
be used as screens metal plates, glass, ceramics. While he explored
time screening, he used a very thin glass plate covered by fine
aluminum dust in one of his experiments. Such a thin screen cannot
cause absorption, yet it did decrease the time passage effects almost
twice. It turned out that besides absorption, there can also be time
reflection, the aluminum plate acting as the reflector. What would
happen if instead of an aluminum plate, we place a concave mirror? It
appears that the mirror may collect and concentrate the time effect in
its focal point. In other words, we may obtain a "time telescope", a
potentially irreplaceable aid in the exploration of close and distant worlds in space.
Research Institute of the Parallel World
It dated back to the time of Stalin and was linked to the names of prominent scientists,
including Kurchatov. Lavrentiy Beria liquidated the institute, along with dozens of its leading
scientists. It was relaunched in 1987 on the Anjou Islands near Novosibirsk, but on 30
August 1989 its activities came to an abrupt end. An extraordinarily powerful explosion
destroyed not only the 780-ton experimental module but also the 2 sq. km archipelago.
According to one explanation, the module with three experimenters inside clashed into a
huge object probably an asteroid, in a parallel world or on their way to one. This is also
how they lost their propulsion system which probably remained in the parallel world.
Vadim Chernobrovs experiments
In the late 1980s, the Russian scientist used electromagnetic pumps to change slightly the
passage of time, achieving a slowdown of 1.5 seconds after a one-hour exposure. His book
The Secrets of Time was published in 1999, and in 2001, he created another "time machine"
model and performed an experiment in the vicinity of Volgograd. Using oscillators with a
symmetric crystal, he slowed time inside the experimental field of his machine down to 10
percent of its normal speed. People who spent time inside the field felt funny as if they
had moved to another world. For them, life passed simultaneously here and "there", as if
space were unfolding.
The questions waiting for an answer
There are many of them: can time run reversely, is its passage constant, are there time
quanta, is there anti-time, is the time machine possible at all... Their answers would imply
that we live in a world where the future and the past are empty words, encountering each
other only within human and all living beings.
A galactic hitchhiker
For Vadim Chernobrov, the time machine is also a ... vehicle. The Russian scientist leads a
group of researchers calling themselves Kosmopoisk, who have been trying to discover the
remnants of Noahs Arc so far unsuccessfully!
Their most recent expedition took them to the coast of Gelendzhik, a Turkish Black Sea
resort. Comparison of Biblical evidence has convinced Chernobrov that this is the place
where he should begin the new quest for any surviving parts of the vessel that let man and
the animals survive the Deluge.
The Russian is also famous for his encyclopedia of mysterious sites in his country, but it was
the publication of the two books Time Machine and The Mysteries of Time in the 1990s that
made him really popular. If he manages to unravel those secrets, he would resolve a host of
other questions. This is why he experiments so intensely. Curiously, one of his devices
aiming to "slow down" time draws its power from an ... accumulator.
'Usuri' magazine 56 (10/2008)