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Travelling back in time IS possible, argues new science book


Traveling into the past is “difficult,” the author admits and there is one, crucial, limitation - you cannot travel back beyond the point when the first time machine is invented.
Rob Waugh – Fri, Oct 18, 2013

“Time travel to the past is possible,” says Colin Stuart, author of The Big Questions in Science.

“In fact, you can travel back in time, arrive three months before you left - and buy yourself a Christmas present before you set off.”

Travelling into the past is “difficult,” Stuart admits, and there is one, crucial, limitation - you cannot travel back beyond the point when the first time machine is invented.

“In fact, the inventor of the first time machine will find it impossible to use,” says Stuart, “Lots of people will think, “Oh, I’ll go back and meet the inventor!’ So he’ll probably spend most of his time shaking their hands.”

Travelling forward in time is relatively easy, most scientists agree - to go forward in time, you simply need to accelerate to speeds close to the speed of light.

As you get close to that speed, time slows down, but only for you, according to Einstein’s Theory of Special Relativity.

Travel far enough, and you could return thousands of years into the future. Travelling backwards, though, is much, much harder - but still, Stuart, says “possible”.

Stuart notes that we have, as yet, never seen a time-traveller - which argues that limitless travel through time is not possible.

Professor Stephen Hawking announced a “party” for time-travellers, with details of latitude and longitude, and invited visitors from the future. “None showed up,” says Stuart.

Stuart also points out that “time tourists” would visit moments such as the launch of the Titanic, or the assassination of JFK, “but they’re not in the photographs.”

Stuart’s method of travelling through time for a surprise Christmas gift is not easy, though - it requires travel to another star, a spacecraft that can travel at near light speed, and a gigantic amount of energy.

“What you would do is create a wormhole - you can use them to go backwards,” says Stuart. “What you would need is something really heavy - which bends space - or a huge amount of energy, to create a wormhole. There’s a rule in physics that you can borrow a huge amount of energy - as long as you pay it back quickly - it’s called the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.”

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Brian Cox argues that using wormholes is tricky - or, in fact, impossible

“You see it in particles in the Large Hadron Collider which pop in and out of existence. If you can somehow pay off that “debt”, you end up with a permanent wormhole in space - which would take you instantly to, say, another star.”

“To travel “back in time”, you simply have to attach one end of the wormhole to a spaceship, fly around at near the speed of light for a while (so time slows down for the spaceship), then jump through the wormhole.”

If the spaceship flew for five years, only six months would have passed within the wormhole - so if you jump through it to the alien star, then fly back to Earth (on yet another spaceship), you arrive three months before you left.

Because you rely on the wormhole, you can’t go further back than when the machine is invented - hence, perhaps, the reason we have never seen any time travellers. Either that, or the sheer amount of effort involved.

Stuart says that this method requires technology far beyond what we currently have, “This isn’t the time to do it,” he admits. “But there are stars that are billions of years older than ours - if there is life there, perhaps they can travel in time.”

Stuart says that while the idea is “possible” it does raise questions - “What happens if you arrive three months before you leave, then shoot yourself? We just don’t know.”

Thus far, the only things we can accelerate to near light speed are particles such as protons in accelerators such as the Large Hadron Collider.

Science writer Carl Sagan once offered the rather weak argument that time travellers might be among us already - but would “disguise themselves” to avoid disrupting the past.

Professor Brian Cox suggests, though, that the idea of a stable wormhole may not be realistic.

“In General Relativity, you can travel backwards in principle,” he said in a speech this year. “It's to do with building these things called wormholes; shortcuts through space and time. But most physicists doubt it. Hawking came up with the 'chronology protection conjecture' - physics we don't yet understand that means wormholes are not stable.”

The Big Questions in Science, published by Andre Deutsch, is out in November


http://uk.news.yahoo.com/travelling-back-in-time-is-possible--argues-new-science-book-140927121.html#SJGIiVU

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How to get your money back after a scam

How to get your money back after a scam

If you have been scammed, you haven't received goods you ordered, or a product isn't as it was described to you, you could easily get your money back.


By Neil Faulkner | lovemoney.com – Thu, May 10, 2012

Lost money to a scam? Getting it back could be easier than you think (Image © Fotolia)

The police and Financial Services Authority admit that they're usually powerless to get your money back after you've been scammed. However, there's a way to do so yourself in many cases, and with relative ease.

If you make any purchases of between £100 and £30,000 and pay for it, or even just part of it, using your credit card, your card provider should pay you back for the entire loss in the event of scam.

It isn't just obliged to do this for scams either. Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act ensures that the card provider must reimburse you if a retailer doesn't deliver the goods or service, or if the product is not as described.


How customers are getting their money back

Credit card companies don't always agree when a customer makes a section 75 request to be reimbursed. Often, customers then complain to the free Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS). It's these borderline cases that give us the most insight into when and where this legal right can be used.

The Ombudsman has just published some recent examples of its decisions relating to section 75. Here are some of the customers who succeeded in getting their money back.

 

Broken promises
Mrs S paid £3,500 for a holiday club on her credit card on the assurance that she would get the whole membership fee back after five years. On receiving the paperwork, however, she realised she'd been tricked.

She complained to the FOS when her lender didn't believe her “recollection of events”. The FOS found public accounts of others taking legal action against the holiday club, so it considered there to be enough evidence and justification for the card provider to reimburse Mrs S, and ordered it to do so.

 

Ill-fitting suits
Mr C paid £800 for a tailor-made suit on his credit card. When the finished suit was delivered to him, it didn't fit properly. He asked the tailors to make alterations, but they didn't show up for the appointment and Mr C had no luck when he complained further.

The lender refused to reimburse Mr C, but the FOS saw evidence from both sides, including photos of Mr C wearing the badly fitting suit. It decided that Mr C had done everything he could to get the tailors to correct their mistakes, and so it ordered the lender to reimburse him.

 

Paying a deposit below the £100 limit
Miss N paid a £99 deposit on her credit card for a £1,000 sofa but, before delivery, the retailer went out of business. Her lender refused to compensate her under section 75, saying she had spent less than £100, so she complained to the FOS.

Although Miss N had only lost £99, the purchase price was £1,000, which means she is covered by section 75. The FOS ordered the card provider to reimburse Miss N.


Make sure you understand section 75

Not everyone is successful when they claim under section 75, even if they take a complaint to the FOS. Indeed, Phillipa Cook, spokeswoman for the Ombudsman, told me that probably a little under half of the section 75 complaints the Ombudsman hears are successful.

We can learn from other customers' mistakes.

 

Paying a deposit below the £30,000 limit
Mrs T used her credit card to pay a deposit of £3,000 to a building company for an overseas property that was going to cost £162,000. The property was never completed and the building company didn't return her calls. Her lender refused to reimburse her and she complained to the FOS.

Unfortunately, it's not the size of the deposit that counts for section 75, but the value of the entire purchase. Since that was over the £30,000 limit, the FOS rejected Mrs T's complaint.

 

Changing your mind
Mr W joined a holiday club, but later changed his mind when he realised he could pay less by shopping around for holidays by himself. He asked his card provider to reimburse him. When it refused, he complained to the FOS.

The FOS decided that the holiday club had not given false or misleading information to Mr W, nor had it breached the contract. Finding that there are better deals elsewhere is not grounds for section 75, so it rejected Mr W's complaint.

 

 

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Ice Age Art: Sculptures and carvings dating back thousands of years on display

 
Extraordinary pieces of art created between 10,000 to 40,000 years ago are to be displayed at the British Museum. The collection gathers pieces on loan from museums all over Europe. The work will be show alongside modern pieces by Mondrian, Matisse and Henry Moore, who in particular felt the influence of the ancient art. The exhibition is open from February 7 and continues until May 26.

 

Spear thrower made from reindeer antler, sculpted as a mammoth. Found in the rock shelter of Montastruc, France, the sculpture is estimated to be between 13,000 and 14,000 years old (The Trustees of the British Museum)

 

Sculpted from steatite, found at Grimaldi, Italy, about 20,000 years old. Musée d'archéologie nationale, France (RMN/Jean-Gilles Berizz)

 

The Venus of Lespugue, a 25,000 year old ivory figurine discovered near the Pyrenees in 1922. Collection d'anthropologie du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle / Musée de l'Homme. (MNHN - MH / Daniel Ponsard)

 

A carving on the tip of a mammoth tusk depicts two reindeer one behind the other; 13,000 years old approximately, Montastruc, France (The Trustees of the British Museum)

 

A fragment of decorated reindeer bone has two reindeer engraved on the surface with two reindeer, one of which is now incomplete; Palaeolithic age which ended 10,000 years ago (The Trustees of the British Museum)

 

The oldest puppet or doll made of mammoth ivory, on loan from Moravian Museum, Anthropos Institute

 

The Venus of Dolní Věstonice, the oldest ceramic figure in the world dated between 29,000 - 25,000 BC, found at the Dolní Věstonice archaeological site in the South Moravian Region in the Czech Republic. On loan from Moravian Museum, Anthropos Institute

 

The oldest known portrait of a woman sculpted from mammoth ivory found at Dolní Věstonice, Moravia, Czech Republic. c.26,000 years old (Moravian Museum, Anthropos Institute)

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A new monumental moment is approaching as the newest Martian rover closes in on its journey towards the Red Planet. Curiosity has been trekking through space since last November, and will be completing its 352-million-mile journey on August 5, 10:31 Pacific time. This Sunday, redOrbit will be bringing you live coverage of the event, nicknamed "seven minutes of terror," from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Bringing the Mars Science Laboratory safely into the Martian atmosphere, and landing Curiosity onto its surface is not a simple task. NASA has acknowledged the difficulty its engineers will be facing this Sunday, by making one of the most complicated landings in the space agency's history from over 300 million miles away.

 

MSL launched aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket on November 26 at 10:02 a.m. eastern time from Cape Canaveral last year. Since then, it has been making its way through space at nearly 13,000 mph. During NASA's "seven minutes of terror" in trying to land the rover safely on Mars, engineers must bring the 13,000 mph spacecraft down to 1.7 mph before reaching the surface to ensure Curiosity lands in one piece. The car-sized rover will be landing beside a Martian mountain in Gale Crater to begin a two year mission of scientific work, helping to uncover whether the area has ever had a suitable environment to support life. In order to reach its landing spot, Curiosity will be flying like a wing in the upper atmosphere of Mars, instead of dropping down lie a rock and utilizing the airbag method.

 

At about seven miles above the surface of the planet, and at a velocity of 900 mph, MSL will deploy a parachute to slow down the descent even more. The spacecraft will be riding down towards the surface for about another six miles before reaching 180 mph. At this stage, curiosity will be released, and the "sky crane" method will be initiated. Mission engineers designed a "sky crane" method for the final several seconds of the flight. During this journey towards the surface, a backpack with retrorockets controlling the descent speed will lower the rover on three nylon cords just before touchdown. NASA said 76 pyrotechnic devices must fire on time during the descent to get Curiosity to the surface.

 

Rover Curiosity sends back first colour picture from the surface of the Mars, Aug 6, 2012
http://youtu.be/kbqgBNaCcfM

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Man dies, comes back to life, what he saw

http://youtu.be/xRSjzY0s0SM

 

This man goes to hell and has been allowed back to tell us what it was like. Some may laugh, but at the end of the day, this is just one of thousands of people we know about that have been through the same thing.

 

Give it a watch and make your own mind up.

 

11 yr Old Went to Heaven and Back, and Tells What He Saw!

http://youtu.be/QdUGoFTfP7w

 

 

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