SCIENTISTS IN SPAIN CREATE “MAGNETIC WORMHOLE” ~ hehe drip,drip, drip, DRIP ?
This
interesting story was passed along (I forget who did so, so my
apologies!) and I have to round out this week of otherwise serious blogs
with something fun, and potentially very significant in its own right.
Scientists in Spain at the Autonomous University of Barcelona have
created a kind of "magnetic wormhole" by using metamaterials (watch the
short four minute video for a fuller explanation than the article:
As
this article and video make clear, this is a magnetic wormhole, not the
gravitationally based Einstein-Rosen bridge, a kind of wormhole that
would require gimongous amounts of energy to open and sustain, and which
would be - as I've mentioned in various interviews before - a "billion
times tinier than tiny," a phrase that, since physicists are enamored of
quantization, captures the essence of the idea.
Now
what's interesting to me here, and what fueled all sorts of
entertaining high octane speculation on my part when I read the story
and watched the video, was really that this "magnetic wormhole" was
actually created by creating a kind of magnetic monopole, something that
has been theorized about for a long time, but never successfully done,
until, apparently, now. Normally, magnetic fields and magnetics are
dipole phenomena, which is a fancy way of saying what we all know from
elementary school, namely, magnets have two poles, a North and South,
but not simply a North one all by itself, or a South one all by itself,
which would be a "monopole." Electricity is likewise a dipole phenomena.
Think, for example, of lightening, when electrical arcing occurs
between regions of predominantly negative and positive charges building
up, until the arc "restores the balance," so to speak. since such
regions can develop at all, and because electricity is so closely
related to magnetism, for such reasons people have theorized that
magnetic monopoles, regions of predominantly one or another polarity,
might develop without the other. But like electricity, an opposite
corresponding region has to exist somewhere in order for that "balance" to be preserved.
In
effect, what the scientists in Spain appear to have done - in so far as
the video suggests - was to send one pole of the dipole "somewhere
else", into a kind of hyper-dimensional region, where it was still
invisibly coupled via that invisible "wormhole" to the pole that
remained "here." As the article and video state, there's not currently
any practical use for such a thing, the experiment being more of a
"proof of concept" experiment, in this case, of the magnetic monopole
and how they might exist.
And
it was this point that of course made me think of all sorts of wild and
crazy possibilities, for if one pole can exist "here" in this
4-dimensional space-time reality, and the other pole "there" in a kind
of hyper-dimensional spatial reality, then at one stroke, it would
appear that the physical reality of hyperdimensional spaces and their connection to this 4d reality,
is if not proven then at least strongly indicated. And that in turn
opens up all sorts of intriguing possibilities for those of you who,
like me, like to contemplate the mysteries of quantum entanglement and
non-locality, for it would appear to be occurring here in a magnetic
context, at a "macroscopic scale". Here's one example from my fun
private musings to contemplate: Place an object, say a molecule, ion, or
atom, into the field of the monopole here, i.e., subject it to the stress of
the monopole field, and what happens on the other side? Does its
hyperdimensional signature appear "there"? All my instincts tells me it
would.
On and on we could go, but with this little experiment, all sorts of new doors and puzzles appear to be opened.
And
you can guess what they're already thinking: why not scale the
experiment up to, oh, say the size of CERN's hadron collider and its
enormous magnetic fields with meta-materials... what might happen then?
Have a nice day, and,
I'll see you on the hyper-dimensional flip side... https://gizadeathstar.com/2016/11/scientists-spain-create-magnetic-wormhole/
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