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...scientific equation that links to both of them as I've found and there's a missing peice to the equation and it works without this peice of the equation and when explained it's understandable, but I'm sort of a perfectionist and I want to find out the missing peice of the equation. Now I know what I need to do to find the missing peice of the equation but to do this I'd need a camera that can magnify an object so that it can see the atoms of it and that can also film them going in slow motion while the object is going at high and low speeds past it but the problem is I'm only 15 and have none of the money to figure out the rest of this equation.
Any ideas on how I can figure out the rest of this equation without buying expensive equitment?
And I'm not telling anyone the equation until it's complete before anyone asks for it.
Before anyone says this is mad I've been following the research that Estien did on time travel.

2007-12-08 01:19:15 · 16 answers · asked by Lily R 6 in Science & Mathematics Physics

I've also had my physics teacher checking my research over and he hasn't found a fualt so far.

2007-12-08 01:20:48 · update #1

By the way the immortality isn't exactly immortality as if a sword goes through your heart or sommat, well your dead no question and as what I'm looking at is linked with time travel all it really does is reverses the process of death and doesn't actually allow you to live for ever but as long as people are willing to drag you back to this planet and away from God.

2007-12-08 01:40:52 · update #2

16 answers

I think your trying to combine a Mass spectrometre and a particle beam accelerator(which I think is a Universally damaging piece of kit!)
Even if this was possible the flaw in your theory is that science can make sub atomic particles speed up or slow call back down the only way to make them "go backwards" as you is for them to be taken apart by neuclear reaction"Einstein.......
Accelerating sub atomic particles is a dangerous pastime I would not call it a "science" when they eventually go too far and punch a pinhole into bottom quark and beyond,,they know it could collapse ths universe in the blink of an eye..
so what the f*** are you all playing at?

2007-12-08 01:37:24 · answer #1 · answered by lazarlin 3 · 2 0

To travel to the future, ... just stand still. The natural flow of time will take you there.

To become immortal would be interesting but impractical.

First: Just remember that your brain has finite capacity. There would come a time when you would be immortal but would have no idea who you are. Or what. Or where. Or why.

Second: Unless your immortality works every time, you would be doomed to watch your loved ones fade away while you lived on. I suggest that if you have ANY feelings at all, you would quickly fall to more than being bummed out. You would quickly want to die.

Third: The moment someone discovers that you are immortal, you would have to share the secret.

3A: If you didn't, you would cease to be immortal because an angry mob would tear you apart.

3B. If you did, the Earth's population would become unmanageable. The Hell-hole it would become would cause people to become angry at you for an unwise choice. They might revoke your immortality by tearing you apart in vengeance for their miserable, sub-standard life as our already stretched resources reach the breaking point.

3C. If you refused to share but survived the mob, someone in the government would take you to area 51. Can you say "lab rat?"

Your idea is to be applauded as a good experiment in thought. Don't stop thinking. And in fact, that's whay you did when you came up with this idea. You need to consider not only HOW to do something, but what it would mean if you actually DID that something. Think ahead. This is exactly why so many people talk about "mad scientists" - who invent something without considering its potential uses. You need to study SCIENTIFIC ETHICS.

2007-12-08 10:15:39 · answer #2 · answered by The_Doc_Man 7 · 1 1

This is without doubt the first step into the unknown category of time travel, and yes the idea seems constructive enough. The equipment you require for this advanced technology does not come cheap, a lens designed for this capability will probably cost a few hundred thousand at least. You need some big financial backing as an investment but if your theory did prove to crack the code of time travel you would obviously be the greatest millionaire in the world. Take your mission to the Dragon's Den.

2007-12-08 09:37:33 · answer #3 · answered by Tango 7 · 2 1

The government gives substantial money to people who have viable research ideas in the form of grants. In your search bar, type in "government research grants" (or similar queries) which will point you in that direction. If your theory or equation is something of interest to the scientific community and you can lay out a plan of action for how you would go about the research, likely you can find research funds to establish your research and make it work. This is how most people are able to get resources to do important research. There are even independent financiers, such as millionaires looking for tax breaks, who offer such grants to quality researchers with a good theory.

Other than the grant form, you will likely not be able to do your research unless you have the money for the equipment you described. However, despite the fact that you want to keep your equation a secret, they will almost definitely want to see ALL of your research data and theories before approving funds for research.

I wish you best of luck in your search. Don't give up on this dream if you think, seriously, that you can make a go of it. All good scientists start with an idea, and perhaps yours is just as GREAT as theirs.

2007-12-08 09:25:37 · answer #4 · answered by Marginality 2 · 3 1

Before you feel crestfallen because of so many sceptic, let me say that you are a prodigy. But it's easy to find the missing piece of the equation. I found many in the lost property dept of London Transport and they are very helpful. Just tell them when it went missing and they have a large database. Some of it goes back to 1975 so you can easily travel back in time. No prob. It's great to be 15.

2007-12-08 09:34:04 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Everything obeys natural laws. You may be only 15, but you have the spirit to chase a dream. Great people have risen over the decades to be known for great definition in scientific advance. You are either mad or a genius or both! My advice? Follow your dream academically .... fill your heart with everything that you believe in and one day, just one day, you may find acclamation in your belief.

2007-12-08 09:36:03 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

the best is yet to come
you are only 15 now , why do not wait until you are 25 before thinking of finishing this equation
in the time being see the life as before anyone changing it

2007-12-08 09:30:53 · answer #7 · answered by kimht 6 · 1 1

Good luck hope all goes well, why don't you remind yourself to come back and get the rest of the equation.

2007-12-08 09:24:51 · answer #8 · answered by sean t 3 · 1 1

I'm pretty sure your physics teacher just didn't want to tell you that it sounds like the ramblings of a mad man. I'm no scientist, but I can find a lot of holes in your theory.

2007-12-08 09:26:21 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

I believe in you Corey-Dale R, and may I suggest diathalon crystals?

2007-12-08 09:28:10 · answer #10 · answered by the norm 3 · 2 0

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