Entanglement (NOT PART OF HSC SYLLABUS) (1 Viewer)

anomalousdecay

Premium Member
Joined
Jan 26, 2013
Messages
5,766
Gender
Male
HSC
2013
Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
91 ATAR, get into UNSW engineering, get a doctorate, become Gordon Freeman ( probably should do a particle physics degree instead).
I'd rather invent something like Alan Walsh did with AAS, but causing a resonance cascade unintentionally and then saving the world would be more fun.

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Originally Posted by anomalousdecay
91 ATAR, get into UNSW engineering, get a doctorate, become Gordon Freeman ( probably should do a particle physics degree instead).
I'd rather invent something like Alan Walsh did with AAS, but causing a resonance cascade unintentionally and then saving the world would be more fun.
Sy123: do it do it do it

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Originally Posted by Sy123
do it do it do it
Hopefully. Finally, someone who knows of the Free-man.

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Does anyone else have something in mind that seems highly unlikely, like a resonance cascade?

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Originally Posted by anomalousdecay
Does anyone else have something in mind that seems highly unlikely, like a resonance cascade?
Spacetime manipulation and portal mechanics.

Humans gotta figure out how to control extremely dense regions of space first....

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Originally Posted by hayabusaboston
Spacetime manipulation and portal mechanics.

Humans gotta figure out how to control extremely dense regions of space first....
Yeah that is true. However, entanglement seems to be the way. A team is trying to teleport photons at the moment. http://www.forbes.com/sites/alexknap...over-88-miles/

Pretty good, huh.

I think these guys should take into account what happened in half-life (especially blue shift and opposing force) how
"Teleportation isn't as easy as going from point a to point b" Dr. Rosenberg.

Simply, by thinking about it, entanglement involves an external factor, where the identity of a photon is opposed with another, in which that photon is opposed with another a fair distance away, which is similar to what Rosenberg was trying to say.

Half-Life is actually quite important for the field, as Einstein said "Imagination is more important than Knowledge".

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Originally Posted by anomalousdecay
Yeah that is true. However, entanglement seems to be the way. A team is trying to teleport photons at the moment. http://www.forbes.com/sites/alexknap...over-88-miles/

Pretty good, huh.

I think these guys should take into account what happened in half-life (especially blue shift and opposing force) how
"Teleportation isn't as easy as going from point a to point b" Dr. Rosenberg.

Simply, by thinking about it, entanglement involves an external factor, where the identity of a photon is opposed with another, in which that photon is opposed with another a fair distance away, which is similar to what Rosenberg was trying to say.

Half-Life is actually quite important for the field, as Einstein said "Imagination is more important than Knowledge".
HOLY SHIT YOU JUST TRIGGERED A WATERFALL OF INFORMATION TO FLOW INTO MY BRAIN FROM ARTICLES AND BOOKS IVE READ ABOUT THIS PREVIOUSLY!!
omg!!

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
I... am.... being.... inundated....with....memories.....of....scientific articles.....

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
o an anomalousdecay, I have different ideas to entanglement, relating to gravitational waves. I need to do more research on these and see if they're actually legit possible, assuming humans have the technology sometime in the future.

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Originally Posted by hayabusaboston
o an anomalousdecay, I have different ideas to entanglement, relating to gravitational waves. I need to do more research on these and see if they're actually legit possible, assuming humans have the technology sometime in the future.
I just simply think of gravitational waves as ripples in a 3-dimensional pond being caused by the movement of mass throughout Einsteinian space.

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Originally Posted by anomalousdecay
I just simply think of gravitational waves as ripples in a 3-dimensional pond being caused by the movement of mass throughout Einsteinian space.
Yea there's more to my ideas than that lol. Different theories provide different models, Im trying to decide which one is most applicable in my situation, and im going to research more before I describe what im thinking. I could be thinking of bullshit lol, thats why im learning about whether its eventually [possible.

Re: Where are you hoping your marks will get you?
Haha.
I guess It could kind of make sense though. I mean if a gravitational wave is generated by the movement of the particle, then space will have the particle's identity of shape and mass. Then, if instead of actually sending the particle hurtling through space, the identity of the particle can be entangled, maybe resulting in teleportation.

I will make an entanglement thread on this in Physics HSC.
4-unit Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, English Advanced, Economics
Aim: 91 ATAR




Originally Posted by anomalousdecay
I just simply think of gravitational waves as ripples in a 3-dimensional pond being caused by the movement of mass throughout Einsteinian space.
Yea there's more to my ideas than that lol. Different theories provide different models, Im trying to decide which one is most applicable in my situation, and im going to research more before I describe what im thinking. In as few words as possible, contraction of spacetime in a controlled manner. This should enlighten you:
http://www.metaresearch.org/cosmolog...of_gravity.asp

I could be thinking of bullshit lol, thats why im researching to see if it is or isnt.

well, gravitational waves do travel faster than light speed lol, that opens a few possibilities... Check out the link I posted.

Continue...............
 
Last edited:

anomalousdecay

Premium Member
Joined
Jan 26, 2013
Messages
5,766
Gender
Male
HSC
2013
Gravitational waves should be faster than the speed of light in theory, since light also warps space.
I checked out the link. The detail is very firm and logical. However it is very hard to test. Perhaps one of us will prove it!!!:awesome:
 

hayabusaboston

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2011
Messages
2,387
Location
Calabi Yau Manifold
Gender
Male
HSC
2013
Gravitational waves should be faster than the speed of light in theory, since light also warps space.
I checked out the link. The detail is very firm and logical. However it is very hard to test. Perhaps one of us will prove it!!!:awesome:
Eggsactly brah! :DD HOw exciting would that be! if one of us proved it! :p
Indeed, hard to test. However, I believe someone will accomplish this, which is why im going off that assumption and just thinking of the mechanics of portals and I guess to an extent, teleportation too.
 

Kiraken

RISK EVERYTHING
Joined
Jun 8, 2012
Messages
1,908
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Gravitational waves should be faster than the speed of light in theory, since light also warps space.
I checked out the link. The detail is very firm and logical. However it is very hard to test. Perhaps one of us will prove it!!!:awesome:
the speed of light in a vacuum is the limit to how fast any massless particle can travel iirc, wouldn't it violate and contradict both special and general relativity if gravitational waves exceeded this?
 

anomalousdecay

Premium Member
Joined
Jan 26, 2013
Messages
5,766
Gender
Male
HSC
2013
Yeah. I think that when I do engineering, I'll try my best to get into ANSTO so that I can manufacture equipment for testing small scale teleportation techniques.
I think the Scientists at CERN or Fermi-lab are not focusing enough on teleportation. But then again, CERN and Fermi-lab do not have the equipment to do such tests.
 

anomalousdecay

Premium Member
Joined
Jan 26, 2013
Messages
5,766
Gender
Male
HSC
2013
"From that they worked out that gravity does move at the same speed as light. Their actual figure was 0.95 times light speed, but with a large error margin of plus or minus 0.25."

That error margin is impressive.
If gravity does move at the same speed of light, then wouldn't it make sense that we could see space warp with the naked eye as soon as an intense light is shone in a room?
 

anomalousdecay

Premium Member
Joined
Jan 26, 2013
Messages
5,766
Gender
Male
HSC
2013
One thing though. I wonder how you actually get the photons entangled in the first place.
How exactly is the information of a photon transferred to another photon?
 

hayabusaboston

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2011
Messages
2,387
Location
Calabi Yau Manifold
Gender
Male
HSC
2013
Ugh the terminology is ugly anomalousdecay haha, the shortest way you can put it is making two subatomic particles interact directly.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top