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Space-time dislocation

In the 1980s, a report in Yorkshire, England, recorded this: "I remember a sunny morning when many people were walking like me.

By QaboosPublished 2 years ago 7 min read
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In the 1980s, a report in Yorkshire, England, recorded this: "I remember a sunny morning when many people were walking like me. As I walked along the way, I found that the people were gone, Only my wife and I were left, an elderly woman in 19th century dress suddenly appeared in front of me, and the weather suddenly turned cooler."

  One noon in the summer of 1912, on the express train from London to Glasgow, England, sat two passengers - Prosecutor Scottley Yard and the young nurse. Suddenly, from the seat near the window, a man's exclamation came. "What's your name? Have you never been on a train?" the prosecutor asked, trying to calm the frightened man down. "My name is Beam Treyk, and I am a coachman from Chotrem, where am I now? Where have I fallen?" He cried bitterly with fear. The prosecutor hurried to call the flight attendants, and when they arrived, the coachman was gone, and the little nurse passed out. If it weren't for the coachman's whip and three-cornered hat still on the seat, it would all be like a phantom. The incident also aroused the interest of the passengers on the bus. After seeing the hat and whip, several people thought it was something from the mid-17th century.

  Later, the prosecutor and the nurse came to the place mentioned by the coachman. At the municipal council there, they learned that as early as the 14th century, there was a mountain village called Chotrem on the lot where the railway passed. The local priest found the name of Beam Treik in the death list of the church file 150 years ago, and there was this record in the blank:

  One night, Treyk was driving home in a carriage, and on the way he saw a "scary vehicle" ahead - an iron, huge monster that spewed fire and smoke like a snake. Inexplicably, Treyk actually appeared inside, and there were some people in strange clothes, probably servants of the devil, who were frightened by Treyk calling for God's blessing. Suddenly, he found himself lying in a ditch by the side of the road, the road became empty, and the horses and carriages were gone. Later, his wife learned that an hour ago, a man in a neighboring village brought back a horse that he had picked up 10 kilometers away from home.

  The prosecutor told the Royal Society what he had learned, and the Society also checked the whole process of the Treyk incident in detail. The three-cornered hat is still preserved in the association hall to this day.

  At around 19:00 on December 22, 2004, Mark and his girlfriend Julia set off in a van F150 to explore the road behind the Catskill Mountains near Magaliteville, New York. Mark recounts his adventure: "I'm confident that even though I choose my route at will, I can always go back the same way. But this time, after 30 minutes of driving, I was completely lost. At this point, it started to snow, and it started to snow more and more, and I was vaguely scared. I was wandering around in the snow for almost an hour, and Julia looked at the fuel gauge and we suddenly got nervous. Omg, the fuel tank is almost bottoming out! Getting lost in a snowstorm in the mountains, and the car has no oil, the more we think about it, the more scared we are. "

  After another hour or so, the young couple finally noticed that there were lights in front of the road, and they thought it would be nice if it was a gas station. Sure enough, it was a rustic adjoining shop with a "grocery store" sign. Completely relieved, Mark drove to the tanker. The tanker looked a bit old, like a 1940s device. Mark thought to himself: Maybe it's a show. A man walked up to them and asked: "The decoration of the car is very suitable, boy, do you want gas?" When the man refueled, Mark asked him how to get back to Magalitville, and the man readily gave directions.

  By this time, Julia had entered the store to look around. Mark followed her in, and he noticed three brand new sedans parked in the yard, but they were all 1940s. After entering the house, Mark saw Julia talking to a woman behind the counter. There are post office boxes on the walls, and candy plates made of glass. After Mark greeted the hostess, he looked around.

  "There's no modern food there. Most gas stations or adjoining stores have fast food like corn chips, but there's no there, just Coke and Hershey meatloaf, which are in glass bottles and the meatloaf is oddly packaged. That's what the store really is like."

  When they paid, something even more surprising happened: "My car usually costs $50 for a gas refill, but the owner said the full gas cost was $2.85. I looked at him and wondered if I heard it wrong, Or is he kidding? So I asked him: 'How much is a gallon?' He said: '10 cents a gallon. I know it's a little more expensive, but it's all because of the war.' I silently handed him the money, got in the car, rolled down the window, and after thanking him, I set off in the direction he pointed."

  Mark said: "What my girlfriend and I went through during that time was real, I'm not going to lie, I remember we were on the way back, the lights gradually dimmed, and then we ran into a strange gas station." The young couple overcame the weather and darkness to finally return to Julia's home.

  Two days later, Mark and Julia decided to look for the strange gas station. They asked everyone along the way, but never found it.

  British and Japanese scientists recently claimed that in 1945, a torpedo fired by a Japanese submarine sank the Titanic, which set sail in 1912, through a time tunnel. To this end, they have collected evidence: a torpedo marked with Japanese markings has not yet exploded, lying in the boiler room of the ill-fated "Titanic".

  "The Titanic didn't hit an iceberg, but was driven halfway around the world by a torpedo fired by a Japanese submarine 33 years later," said Dr. Samuel Molins of the Institute for Advanced Applied Physics in London.

  "The evidence we found is beyond doubt. This unexploded torpedo with Japanese symbols can only be a product of World War II, and it is still'lying 'in the'Titanic'.

  "The hole left by the torpedo penetrating the'Titanic 'convinces us that it was not placed there after the incident. The torpedo was fired from a Japanese submarine. However, in 1912, when the'Titanic' made its maiden voyage from England to New York, the submarine had not yet been built. The submarine was only designed in 1939, and the markings on the torpedo prove that the submarine was launched in 1943.

  "We also have strong evidence that the past, present and future actually exist at the same time. It shows that one day we can travel through time and space and change the past, present and future as we please. We can even go back to 1912 or 1943 and save the'Titanic '."

  Molins and respected Japanese physicist Dr. Haruko Sugimura co-authored the report, published in the British academic journal World Physical Perspectives. While it was a global sensation, many people disagreed. Although scientists used deep-water remote-controlled cameras to spot Japanese torpedoes in the Titanic, they believe it may be a coincidence that the holes in the heavy hull of the Titanic match the size of the torpedo's penetration.

  Molins and Sugimura retorted that the chances of a World War II torpedo matching a hole in the hull of the Titanic, which sank on April 14-15, 1912, were "almost zero". "The evidence that leads us to this conclusion doesn't stop there," Sugimura said. "The Titanic, which was broken in two, is still'lying 'at the bottom of the North Atlantic.

  "We have used advanced computers to conduct many simulations, and the conclusion is: no matter how big the iceberg is, how fast the'Titanic 'is, and what the course is, it is impossible for the ship to break into two after hitting the iceberg. But according to our computer simulations, the power of a torpedo explosion plus the reaction force of the'Titanic' itself when the torpedo explosion caused damage, the two together are enough to split the'Titanic 'in two.

  "In fact, the'Titanic 'was sunk by a torpedo. If we can be honest and unbiased about the evidence found, then this is for sure. What hangs in the balance is where exactly did that torpedo come from? How did it hit the'Titanic'? Even a layman can easily see that the torpedo went through a wormhole or a time tunnel to cause this."

  Physicists have long suspected that humans live in multidimensional spaces, some of which hold the past, present and future together at the same time, but are not known. In some cases, space-time can be dislocated, taking people to scenes in the past or future. Some scientists also believe that people travel to the past and the future through time-space tunnels. Under certain conditions, we may find entrances connecting various time and space, and travel back and forth in different time and space and regions in the time-space tunnel. Many experts who believe in multidimensional space travel point out that with the right speed at the right time and in the right place, you can step into the future or return to the past.

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About the Creator

Qaboos

I'm Qaboos and I speak for myself.

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