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Fox: Scientists Teleport Matter More Than Three Feet

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posted on Jan, 29 2009 @ 12:21 AM
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Originally posted by MoonMine






Physicist Richard Feynman is quoted as having said that "if you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't understand quantum mechanics."

Or sometimes he is cited thusly: "I think I can safely say that nobody understand quantum mechanics."




What do you reckon he is paid per year for this wisdom?










Originally posted by MoonMine

What do you reckon he is paid per year for this wisdom?






Whatever he was paid it wasn't nearly enough.

Richard Feynman contributed some other things beyond this throwaway line.
One of the great minds of our times, and with a sense of humour to boot.

Have you read enough of his breakthrough works to be critical of him?


LAUGH OUT LOUD !!!



posted on Jan, 29 2009 @ 12:36 AM
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Black ops my ass...

We got this technology 5 years ago from the Asgard


We're just releasing it slowly



posted on Jan, 29 2009 @ 12:54 AM
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posted on Jan, 29 2009 @ 01:26 AM
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1 inch... 2 inch...





1 foot, 2 foot, three foot, 5 foot, 8 foot, 13 foot, 21 foot, 34 foot, 55 foot!


89, 144, 233, 377, 600 ft!!


football stadium, countries, continents, planets, galaxies...


positive thoughts.



posted on Jan, 29 2009 @ 02:10 PM
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Originally posted by Raytracer
I think they didn't teleport anything, but they made a copy of the information (or matter) from one place to another.
True teleport ala Star Trek moves unique matter from one place to another.


No it doesn't
It creates a new you at the destination, simultaneously destroying the old you.



posted on Jan, 30 2009 @ 12:18 AM
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have you guys ever watched charlie and the chocolate factory....its kind of weird how a lot of futuristic stuff seen on movies plays a role in the later future of actuality. i believe the millitary has the power to telaport objects it wouldnt be that hard to do if you had the knowledge and the money/equipment. what would be hard to do is reverse telaporting it sounds weird but what im talking about instead of moving something forward over time, you bring something back before time. i have figured out how time travel works you guys would be jelouse......

Ok so you get deep in the military, then you go back to civillian life, bam you just travelled its like you are in the new stone age again



posted on Jan, 30 2009 @ 03:28 AM
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reply to post by InfaRedMan
 


I was thinking about how great this would be for online gaming. Good bye lag..



posted on Feb, 3 2009 @ 12:37 AM
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reply to post by mmiichael
 


One of the great minds of our times, and with a sense of humour to boot.


I like Feynman too. Cool guy and great teacher. Very original thinker.

In addition to making important new contributions to theoretical physics, Feynman also was a fairly competent musician -



I recall a few years back reading a story in the general press about a couple of Japanese researchers who had been successful in 'transmitting' a single atom of a very exotic substance, something like anti-matter deuterium, or maybe it was anti-tritium. Very special stuff. They could only collect a few atoms of the stuff any given time because it decayed so rapidly. I tried to find a reference to this tonight before posting and was unsuccessful.

But, I did find this, which is kind of interesting -



... a pulse of light that enters a transparent chamber filled with caesium gas reaches speeds 300 times the normal speed of light.

According to the researchers, the main part of the light pulse leaves the far side of the chamber even before it enters at the near side!

A research paper on the experiment, by Lijun Wang of the NEC Research Institute in Princeton, US, is reported to have been submitted to a major science journal, though it remains to be seen how far it will get.

Source Article

Please visit the link provided for the complete story.

Interesting thread. Thanks for posting.



posted on Feb, 3 2009 @ 01:41 PM
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Originally posted by visible_villain



... a pulse of light that enters a transparent chamber filled with caesium gas reaches speeds 300 times the normal speed of light.


Please visit the link provided for the complete story.

Interesting thread. Thanks for posting.


Einstein was wrong!

Thanks




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