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Tesla’s Time Travel Experiment: I could see the past, present and future all at the same time’

Nikola Tesla Time Machine

Apparently, Tesla too was obsessed with time travel. He worked on a time machine and reportedly succeeded, saying: ‘I could see the past, present, and future all at the same time.’

The idea that humans are able to travel in time has captured the imagination of millions around the globe. If we look back at history, we will find numerous texts that can be interpreted as evidence of time travel.

When Albert Einstein published his theory of relativity in 1905, it created a buzz in the scientific community, opening the page for many questions such as, “time travel, a possibility?”

There is even evidence of time travel in the Bible according to Erick von Daniken:

“In the Bible, the prophet Jeremiah was sitting together with a few of his friends, and there was a young boy. His name was   Abimelech,   and Jeremiah said to   Abimelech, “Go out of Jerusalem, there is a hill and collect some figs for us.” The boy went out and collected the fresh figs. All of a sudden,   Abimelech hears some noise and wind in the air, and he becomes unconscious, he had a blackout. After a time, he wakes up again, and he saw it was nearly the evening. So when he runs back to the society and the city was full of strange soldiers. And he says, “What’s going on here? Where are Jeremiah and all the others?” And an old man said, “That was 62 years ago.” It’s a time travel story written in the Bible. – Von Däniken.  

If we look at the Mahabharata, written in the eighth century BC, King Raivata is described as traveling to the heavens to meet with the creator god Brahma, only to return to Earth hundreds of years in the future.

In Japan, the legend of Urashima Taro describes the tale of a fisherman’s visit to the protector god of the sea- Ryūjin in an underwater palace for what seemed like only three days. When he returns to his fishing village, he finds that it’s been 300 years that he’s been gone.

Maybe all of these ‘myths’ inspired great thinkers to try and figure out a way to achieving time travel.

Not long ago, a team of scientists from the University of Queensland, Australia, have  simulated how time-traveling photons might behave , indicating that at least on a  QUANTUM LEVE, the grandfather paradox –which demonstrates how time travel is not possible— can be resolved. Using photons –single particles of light—  researchers simulated  quantum particles traveling to the past. After studying their behaviors, researchers revealed possible  anomalous aspects of modern-day physics .

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWFJWF5faRM

However, it seems that Nikola Tesla may have worked on time travel before modern science even thought it was possible.

According to reports, in 1895 Tesla made a shocking discovery suggesting that time and space could be influenced by magnetic fields. Allegedly, this idea –that one could alter time and space by magnetic fields— led to a number of experiments that allegedly gave birth to the infamous Philadelphia project –considered mostly a hoax.

It is believed that Tesla worked on the idea of time travel, discovering amazing results along the way. Using magnetic fields, Tesla found that the space-time barrier could be ‘altered’ and accessed by creating a ‘trojan horse’ which eventually led to a different time.

However, it is still unclear whether or not Tesla actually achieved this as there are no documents whatsoever that prove –or for that case—disprove something like this occurred.

The only thing we do know is that reports state that in 1895, a witness found Tesla at a small coffee shop looking shaken and disturbed. His assistant claimed that Tesla was almost electrocuted by a machine as Tesla was trying to solve the time travel riddle.

After nearly dying, Tesla claimed he had found himself in an entirely different time and space window, where he could see the past, present, and future at the same time while staying within the artificially created ‘magnetic field.’

Regrettably, there are no documents –which we were able to find– to back up these claims. However, if Tesla tried to achieve time travel, he surely wasn’t the only scientist to try.

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The Debrief

Scientists Successfully Simulate Backward Time Travel with a 25% Chance of Actually Changing the Past

Scientists trying to take advantage of the unusual properties of the quantum realm say they have successfully simulated a method of backward time travel that allowed them to change an event after the fact one out of four times. The Cambridge University team is quick to caution that they have not built a time machine, per se, but also note how their process doesn’t violate physics while changing past events after they have happened.

“Imagine that you want to send a gift to someone: you need to send it on day one to make sure it arrives on day three,” explained lead author David Arvidsson-Shukur from the Cambridge Hitachi Laboratory. “However, you only receive that person’s wish list on day two.”

To respect the gift recipient’s timeline, you would need to send it on day one. But, as Arvidsson-Shukur notes, you won’t know what gift to send until later, meaning your gift will either be late or be wrong.

“Now imagine you can change what you send on day one with the information from the wish list received on day two,” he adds. It is exactly this phenomenon that the researchers say can happen in the right scenario.

“Our simulation uses quantum entanglement manipulation to show how you could retroactively change your previous actions to ensure the final outcome is the one you want.”

Using Quantum Entanglement to Change Your Gift to the Right One After it was Sent

Quantum entanglement is a process where certain fundamental aspects of quantum particles are shared by two or more particles, and changing those properties in any single particle causes the same change in the others. In their simulations, which were published in the journal Physical Review Letters , the Cambridge research team simulated the entanglement of two particles. One of the particles is then sent off to be used in an experiment.

After the experiment’s completion, they gained new information, which would have caused them to act differently. In this situation, “the experimentalist manipulates the second particle to effectively alter the first particle’s past state, changing the outcome of the experiment.” explained the study’s co-author Nicole Yunger Halpern, a researcher at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Maryland.

In effect, by changing the remaining particle, the researchers changed the past. At least in their simulations. It’s an effect the researchers described as “remarkable.” However, they say there is a catch. The experiment only changes the past with the new information about 25% of the time.

“In other words, the simulation has a 75% chance of failure,” says Arvidsson-Shukur. “If we stay with our gift analogy, one out of four times, the gift will be the desired one (for example, a pair of trousers), another time it will be a pair of trousers but in the wrong size, or the wrong colour, or it will be a jacket.”

Fortunately, in their simulations, they at least know when they have failed, which can still allow the researcher to rework the system to effectively achieve backward time travel and get the result that they wanted. To achieve this seemingly impossible goal, they propose using a filter that will allow their theoretical experimenter to send a number of solutions and then simply filter out the 75% that they didn’t want.

“Let’s say sending gifts is inexpensive, and we can send numerous parcels on day one,” said co-author Aidan McConnell, Ph.D., who carried out this research during his master’s degree at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge. “On day two, we know which gift we should have sent. By the time the parcels arrive on day three, one out of every four gifts will be correct, and we select these by telling the recipient which deliveries to throw away.”

Not a Time Machine, But a Backward Time Travel System?

The researchers made sure to point out that these are just simulations, albeit successful ones programmed in the known behaviors of entangled particles. So even though it effectively proved a way to change the results of an experiment in the past, 25% of the time at least, its ability to achieve a form of backward time travel still shouldn’t necessarily be compared to a certain Flux Capacitor-equipped DeLorean built by a certain Doc Emmet Brown.

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“We are not proposing a time travel machine, but rather a deep dive into the fundamentals of quantum mechanics,” said Arvidsson-Shukur. “These simulations do not allow you to go back and alter your past, but they do allow you to create a better tomorrow by fixing yesterday’s problems today.”

The researcher also notes that the failure rate of their backward time travel system is somewhat reassuring, especially for physicists who depend on Einstein’s theories of relativity and all of the science built upon those theories.

“That we need to use a filter to make our experiment work is actually pretty reassuring,” he said. “The world would be very strange if our time-travel simulation worked every time. Relativity and all the theories that we are building our understanding of our universe on would be out of the window.”

Christopher Plain is a Science Fiction and Fantasy novelist and Head Science Writer at The Debrief. Follow and connect with him on X , learn about his books at plainfiction.com , or email him directly at [email protected] .

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Nikola Tesla’s Time Travel Experience: “I Could See Past, Present And Future Simultaneously”

Nicola Tesla describes his time travelling experience

Nikola Tesla was obsessed with time travel. He worked on a time machine and reportedly succeeded, saying: ‘I could see the past, present and future all at the same time.’

tesla time travel machine

The idea that humans are able to travel in time has captured the imagination of millions around the globe. If we look back at history, we will find numerous texts that can be interpreted as evidence of time travel.

tesla time travel machine

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When Albert Einstein published his theory of relativity in 1905, it created a buzz in the scientific community, opening the page for many questions such as: “time travel, a possibility?”

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There is also evidence of time travel in the Bible according to Erick von Daniken:

“In the Bible, the prophet Jeremiah was sitting together with a few of his friends, and there was a young boy. His name was Abimelech, and Jeremiah said to Abimelech, “Go out of Jerusalem, there is a hill and collect some figs for us.” The boy went out and collected the fresh figs. All of a sudden, Abimelech hears some noise and wind in the air, and he becomes unconscious, he had a blackout. After a time, he wakes up again, and he saw it was nearly the evening. So when he runs back to the society and the city was full of strange soldiers. And he says, “What’s going on here? Where are Jeremiah and all the others?” And an old man said, “That was 62 years ago.” It’s a time travel story written in the Bible. – Von Däniken.

According to reports, in 1895 Tesla made a shocking discovery suggesting that time and space could be influenced by magnetic fields.

Disclose.tv reports:  A part of the admission had come from Tesla experimenting with radio frequencies along with power transmission through the Earth’s atmosphere. The discovery would many years later lead to the Philadelphia experiment along with time travel programs. However, a long time before the top-secret military programs were even thought about Tesla had already made some discoveries that were fascinating in regards to nature of time and the possibilities of being able to travel through time.

https://youtu.be/HWFJWF5faRM

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The experiments of Tesla in high voltage electricity along with magnetic fields led to him discovering that time and space may be deformed to essentially create a door that may lead to another time. With the discovery, Tesla then went on to discover, through his own personal experiences, that traveling through time came with some real dangers.

TESLA WAS SAID TO BE HIT BY 3.5 MILLION VOLTS OF ELECTRICITY

The very first experience that Tesla had with traveling in time occurred in March 1895. A New York Herald reporter wrote that he found the inventor sitting in a café after he had just been hit by 3.5 million volts of electricity. The reporter said that Tesla had told him that he would not be very pleasant company to be around due to the fact that he had almost died. He went on to say that a three-foot spark had jumped into the air and hit him on the shoulder.

Tesla went on to tell the reporter that if it had not been for his assistant turning the power off straight away he would have been killed. Tesla went on to tell the reporter that when he was in contact with the resonance from the electromagnetic charge he had found that he went out of his space and time window. He said that he had been able to see the past, the present and the future at the very same time. He admitted that he had been paralyzed in the electromagnetic field and so he had been unable to help himself. Thankfully his assistant had been beside him and had been able to turn off the power before any severe and permanent damage had been done.

INCIDENT SAID TO BE REPEATED IN PHILADELPHIA EXPERIMENT BY US NAVY

Many years later the repetition of the exact same incident occurred during the Philadelphia Experiment. However, this led to sailors being left outside of the window space reference for a long time and this, of course, had results that were disastrous.

The Philadelphia Experiment was the alleged military experiment which was said to have been carried out by the US Navy in 1943. It was said that the escort the USS Eldridge had become invisible to enemies. However, the US Navy has always said that no such experiment happened and the claims of the ship becoming invisible did not conform to physical laws.

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my brain doesnt believe it..but my heart does..

I feel you on that, I’m on the fence w/an open mind

i am very glad to hear that

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The Mystery of Nikola Tesla’s Missing Files

By: Sarah Pruitt

Updated: June 1, 2023 | Original: May 3, 2018

Colorized photo of Nikola Tesla. (Credit: Prometheus Entertainment)

After Nikola Tesla was found dead in January 1943 in his hotel room in New York City, representatives of the U.S. government’s Office of Alien Property seized many documents relating to the brilliant and prolific 86-year-old inventor’s work.

It was the height of World War II, and Tesla had claimed to have invented a powerful particle-beam weapon, known as the “Death Ray,” that could have proved invaluable in the ongoing conflict. So rather than risk Tesla’s technology falling into the hands of America’s enemies, the government swooped in and took possession of all the property and documents from his room at the New Yorker Hotel.

What happened to Tesla’s files from there, as well as what exactly was in those files, remains shrouded in mystery—and ripe for conspiracy theories. After years of fielding questions about possible cover-ups, the FBI finally declassified  some 250 pages of Tesla-related documents under the Freedom of Information Act in 2016. The bureau followed up with two additional releases, the latest in March 2018. But even with the publication of these documents, many questions still remain unanswered—and some of Tesla’s files are still missing.

Three weeks after the Serbian-American inventor’s death, an electrical engineer from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) was tasked with evaluating his papers to determine whether they contained “any ideas of significant value.” According to the declassified files, Dr. John G. Trump reported that his analysis showed Tesla’s efforts to be “primarily of a speculative, philosophical and promotional character” and said the papers did “not include new sound, workable principles or methods for realizing such results.”

John Trump, head of research at MIT, in high voltage research lab of MIT, 1949. (Credit: Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images)

The scientist’s name undoubtedly rings a bell, as John G. Trump was the uncle of the 45th U.S. president, Donald J. Trump. The younger brother of Trump’s father, Fred, he helped design X-ray machines that greatly helped cancer patients and worked on radar research for the Allies during World War II. Donald Trump himself cited his uncle’s credentials often during his presidential campaign. “My uncle used to tell me about nuclear before nuclear was nuclear,” he once told  an interviewer.

At the time, the FBI pointed to Dr. Trump’s report as evidence that Tesla’s vaunted “Death Ray” particle beam weapon didn’t exist, outside of rumors and speculation. But in fact, the U.S. government itself was split in its response to Tesla’s technology. Marc Seifer, author of the biography Wizard: The Life & Times of Nikola Tesla , says a group of military personnel at Wright Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio, including Brigadier General L.C. Craigee, had a very different opinion of Tesla’s ideas.

“Craigee was the first person to ever fly a jet plane for the military, so he was like the John Glenn of the day,” Seifer says. “He said, ‘there’s something to this—the particle beam weapon is real.’ So you have two different groups, one group dismissing Tesla’s invention, and another group saying there’s really something to it.”  

Then there’s the nagging question of the missing files. When Tesla died, his estate was to go to his nephew, Sava Kosanovic, who at the time was the Yugoslav ambassador to the U.S. (thanks to his familial connection with Serbia’s most celebrated inventor). According to the recently declassified documents, some in the FBI feared Kosanovic was trying to wrest control of Tesla’s technology in order to “make such information available to the enemy,” and even considered arresting him to prevent this.

Yugoslavan Ambassador Sava N. Kosanovic in his study. (Credit: George Skadding/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images)

In 1952, after a U.S. court declared Kosanovic the rightful heir to his uncle’s estate, Tesla’s files and other materials were sent to Belgrade, Serbia, where they now reside in the Nikola Tesla Museum there. But while the FBI originally recorded some 80 trunks among Tesla’s effects, only 60 arrived in Belgrade, Seifer says. “Maybe they packed the 80 into 60, but there is the possibility that…the government did keep the missing trunks.”  

For the five-part HISTORY series The Tesla Files , Seifer joined forces with Dr. Travis Taylor, an astrophysicist, and Jason Stapleton, an investigative reporter, to search for these missing files and seek out the truth of the government’s views on the “Death Ray” particle-beam weapon and Tesla’s other ideas.

Despite John G. Trump’s dismissive assessment of Tesla’s ideas immediately after his death, the military did try and incorporate particle-beam weaponry in the decades following World War II, Seifer says. Notably, the inspiration of the “Death Ray” fueled Ronald Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative, or “Star Wars” program, in the 1980s. If the government is still using Tesla’s ideas to power its technology, Seifer explains, that could explain why some files related to the inventor still remain classified.

Nilkola Tesla sitting in his Colorado Spring laboratory.

There is evidence that Franklin D. Roosevelt’s vice president, Henry Wallace, discussed “the effects of TESLA, particularly those dealing with the wireless transmission of electrical energy and the ‘death ray’” with his advisors, according to FBI documents released in 2016. Along the same lines, Seifer and his colleagues in  The Tesla Files  uncovered the role played by Vannevar Bush, whom FDR appointed as head of the  Manhattan Project , in the evaluation of Tesla’s papers. They also looked at the possibility that FDR himself may have sought a meeting with the inventor just before he died.

By visiting some of the key places in Tesla’s life—from his laboratory in Colorado Springs to his last living quarters at the Hotel New Yorker to the mysterious wireless tower he built at Wardenclyffe, Long Island—Seifer, Taylor and Stapleton sought to unravel some of the mysteries surrounding the celebrated, enigmatic inventor. They also traveled to California, where some of Tesla’s other groundbreaking ideas —many of which were seen as unrealistic or even crackpot during his own lifetime—now fuel some of the most dominant industries in Silicon Valley.

Although some of his more sensitive innovations may still be hidden, Tesla’s legacy is alive and well, both in the devices we use every day, and the technologies that will undoubtedly play a role in our future. “Tesla is the inventor of wireless technology. He’s the inventor of the ability to create an unlimited number of wireless channels,” Seifer says of the inventor’s lasting impact. “So radio guidance systems, encryption, remote control robots—it’s all based on Tesla’s technology.”

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5 Visions That Showed Nikola Tesla Was Ahead of His Time

Tesla's Wardenclyffe Tower

Modern society owes a lot to Nikola Tesla.

The Serbian-American scientist's inventions led to the radios and power grids used today. Over the course of his life, Tesla registered some 300 patents under his name, and traces of his inventions can be found in many modern-day devices, including in some unexpected places, such as remote-controlled boat toys and letter-shaped neon lights.

But not all of Tesla's futuristic visions came to fruition. Some of the inventor's most far-out and ambitious dreams went unrealized, such as his vision for the wireless transmission of energy. In other cases, what Tesla invented was simply not practical enough to replace existing systems, such as the bladeless steam turbine, or was too dangerous to use, such as a steam-powered electric generator that came to be known as the "earthquake machine," after Tesla claimed the generator caused an earthquake in New York City in 1898. [ Photos: Nikola Tesla's Historic Lab at Wardenclyffe ]

And there were other times when Tesla's ideas were just too revolutionary to fathom, or were so bizarre that they were ridiculed by other scientists. Some of Tesla's theoretical inventions, such as a "death ray" weapon and force field, existed only in science fiction.

But in the 71 years since Tesla's death, some of the eccentric inventor's ideas have come to pass — the "mad scientist" may have actually been on to something. Here is a look at some of Tesla's most bizarre ideas that had some ties to reality.

The thought camera

Tesla may have thought about inventing a machine to read mental imagery and thoughts. In an article published in the Kansas City Journal-Post in September 1933, he told reporters about several projects he had been working on, including a device that concerns "photographing of thought."

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"I expect to photograph thoughts," Tesla said. "In 1893, while engaged in certain investigations, I became convinced that a definite image formed in thought, must by reflex action, produce a corresponding image on the retina, which might be read by a suitable apparatus…Now if it be true that a thought reflects an image on the retina, it is a mere question of illuminating the same property and taking photographs, and then using the ordinary methods which are available to project the image on a screen.

"If this can be done successfully, then the objects imagined by a person would be clearly reflected on the screen as they are formed, and in this way every thought of the individual could be read. Our minds would then, indeed, be like open books," he continued.

Tesla's plan never became a reality, but researchers are still studying vision and exploring the idea of mind-reading machines. Today, scientists have created artificial retinas through sophisticated mathematical analyses of how real retinas convert images to electrical impulses to send up to the brain. In attempts at mind-reading, scientists have developed algorithms that can learn to interpret brain signals and reproduce a rough version of images "seen" in a person's mind.

Livestreamed video

Tesla may have had a good grasp of what it feels like to watch real-time streaming of video on modern-day laptops and smartphones. In a news clip published on Jan. 26, 1926, Tesla predicted that by applying the principles of radio, future devices will enable people to carry a small instrument in their pockets to see distant events, according to the Associated Press. [ Creative Genius: The World's Greatest Minds ]

The futuristic idea was described in an interview published in the current issue of Collier's Weekly, in which Tesla says, "We shall be able to witness the inauguration of a president, the playing of a World's Series baseball game, the havoc of an earthquake, or a battle just as though we were present."

Wireless electricity

Perhaps the greatest ambition of Tesla was his dream to wirelessly transmit energy across long distances, using only air as a medium. He demonstrated it was possible to wirelessly light up lamps using a method called inductive coupling, but he wasn't successful in building a long-range system to broadcast energy.

But now, researchers have refined and developed several techniques that may have brought Tesla's dream a few steps closer to reality. The areas of exploration range from wireless charging of digital devices at home to potential power supplies for space elevators . Still, there are some major barriers. Even working prototypes for the short-range wireless transmission of electricity show that engineers have a long way to go before these innovative techniques can replace existing systems and become widely used.

Contact with aliens?

In 1899, during the time Tesla spent in Colorado Springs, Colorado, experimenting with high-frequency electricity and wireless telegraphy, Tesla picked up peculiar radio signals on his instruments. He believed the signals were extraterrestrial in origin.

"The changes I noted were taking place periodically and with such a clear suggestion of number and order that they were not traceable to any cause known to me. I was familiar, of course, with such electrical disturbances as are produced by the sun, Aurora Borealis, and earth currents, and I was as sure as I could be of any fact that these variations were due to none of these causes," Tesla wrote in Collier's Weekly in 1901.

"The feeling is constantly growing on me that I had been the first to hear the greeting of one planet to another," Tesla wrote.

The scientific community didn't believe Tesla had made contact the aliens , but later, it was suggested that he may have picked up cosmic radio waves, a phenomenon that was not known at the time. Or, it's possible that Tesla's sensitive instruments had received the radio messages that Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi was transmitting from Europe.

In 1901, when working on creating trans-Atlantic radio, Tesla proposed what now sounds like a modern-day cellphone to his funder, J.P. Morgan. The idea was to create a plan for a "World Telegraphy System" that allows instant communication of news to individual handheld devices.

Tesla believed Morgan could make money by manufacturing such receivers that could be used by anyone, and could pick up voice messages or music played in distant places. According to W. Bernard Carlson, a historian at The University of Virginia, and author of "Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age" (Princeton University Press, 2013), the scientist had envisioned cellphones, and his prediction was a harbinger of the consumer culture that would characterize the 21st century.

Email Bahar Gholipour . Follow LiveScience @livescience , Facebook & Google+ . Originally published on  Live Science .

Bahar Gholipour

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A Time Machine in the Mojave Desert

A four-story structure designed to recharge cell structure is now a recording studio and tourist attraction.

tesla time travel machine

The sign said, “Dedicated to Research in Life Extension.” George Van Tassel, an aviator and UFOlogist, put it outside a structure he described as “a time machine for basic research on rejuvenation, anti-gravity, and time travel” in the Mojave Desert in the early 1950s.

In fact, the story of George Van Tassel’s Integratron, as the machine is known, is so outlandish, so otherworldly, and so enchanting—encompassing UFOs, electromagnetism, Nikola Tesla, Howard Hughes, Moses, and an alleged German spy—that it’s little wonder the site continues to attract tourists, artists, reporters, drifters, and spiritual pilgrims more than 60 years after Van Tassel began to build what would become his life’s work.

The white wood-domed structure sits four stories high and 55 feet in diameter, just off Twentynine Palms Highway in Landers, California, about an hour north of Palm Springs. According to Van Tassel, the site was determined by its relationship to the Great Pyramids in Giza as well as its proximity to magnetic vortices. It is a 16-sided metal-free building constructed using a technique called joinery—no nails or screws were used in an attempt to avoid interference with the conductive properties of the machine. Inside, the acoustically perfect sanctuary made of Douglas fir rises three stories high and features sweeping views of the desert from its 16 small windows. The Integratron remains open to visitors today, although it’s no longer outfitted for the purpose of time travel—the machinery is, mysteriously, long gone.

The story of Van Tassel’s time-travel dome begins under a rock—yes, an actual rock—where he lived. It was here, a few miles from Landers, that the inventor established an airport which he ran for 29 years on land leased from the U.S. government. It’s also where he incorporated a science philosophy organization called The Ministry of Universal Wisdom, one of many UFO cults that sprouted up in California shortly after the 1947 Roswell incident that brought UFO culture into the mainstream.

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The most infamous of these groups is probably Heaven’s Gate—whose members committed suicide in order to ascend to a spaceship following the Hale-Bopp comet—but there’s also Scientology (founded in 1952), the Universal Articulate Interdimensional Understanding of Science (1954), and the Aetherius Society (1955). The organizations held in common the belief that communication with extraterrestrials was possible and that by channeling their messages (many aliens, believers said, were concerned with the earthlings' attempts to develop a hydrogen bomb) the contactee could ultimately help save mankind. “The UFO culture of the 1950s arose after the end of WWII, and rockets, nuclear weapons, and new aircraft were being designed and built based on war effort innovation,” notes Bernard Bates, a professor of astronomy at the University of Puget Sound. “People were afraid death could come out of the sky... and they were seeing all sorts of natural and human made phenomena which they didn’t understand.” It was during this era of increasing distrust among Americans of the U.S. government, the beginnings of the Cold War, with the possibility of nuclear weapons looming and the new-age movement in California blossoming, that Van Tassel rose to local, then national prominence as a charming, well-spoken UFO expert. Much of his notoriety was a result of the annual Giant Rock Interplanetary Spacecraft Convention, which he hosted for more than 20 years.

Seven stories high and many thousands of tons, Giant Rock dominates the desert landscape and became a local landmark due to its size. It was underneath the boulder that a German immigrant named Frank Critzer carved out a 400-square-foot house for himself where Van Tassel would visit him occasionally. The story goes that Critzer also installed a radio antennae on top of the rock and came under suspicion by the authorities for being a German spy shortly after WWII. Accounts vary, but a tear gas canister from a botched FBI raid is said to have somehow ignited Critzer’s store of dynamite and blown him to bits. Van Tassel moved in shortly thereafter with his wife. And on August 24, 1953, it was here that Van Tassel received his instructions regarding what would become his “tabernacle”—the Integratron.

Van Tassel liked to say that both he and Moses were compelled to build their tabernacles via instructions from a man that came out of the sky—in Moses’s case it was God, and in Van Tassel’s, an extraterrestrial. Van Tassel writes in his memoir I Rode a Flying Saucer that he awoke one night to find a man standing at the foot of his bed. “Beyond the man, about a hundred yards away, hovered a glittering, glowing spaceship, seemingly about eight feet off the ground.” The man introduced himself in English as Solganda from the planet Venus and invited Van Tassel aboard his ship, where he divulged the schematics of the Integratron. Its construction would become Van Tassel’s focus for the next 25 years.

tesla time travel machine

Van Tassel’s interest in flying aircraft was borne out by his career choice. Born in 1910 in Ohio, he entered the aviation industry in 1927 after gaining his pilot’s license, and worked for both Howard Hughes at Hughes Aviation and Lockheed Aircraft during his career. Of Hughes he wrote, “One day with Howard was more to me than months I have spent with other men.” The author of four books, Van Tassel claimed to have made exactly 410 radio and TV appearances and gave hundreds of lectures across the U.S. and Canada in his lifetime—many concerning the mysterious dome he was building out in the desert. He was also quoted talking about his UFO visit in Life magazine in 1957—albeit mockingly.

The Life reporter, covering Van Tassel’s Interplanetary Spacecraft Convention for the magazine’s May 1957 issue, characterized the convention’s 1,200 “earthling” attendees—who came to swap stories of UFO abductions and hopefully spot a saucer or two after the sun went down. It probably didn’t help Van Tassel’s credibility that he announced at the convention that he’d decided to run for president in 1960 and that his extraterrestrial friends were going to help run his campaign. Even his supporters, like the fellow UFO enthusiast and author Trevor James Constable, acknowledged that Van Tassel was widely regarded by scientists as a crackpot. But despite the skepticism he faced from the media, Van Tassel’s devotees had no such hesitations—the Integratron was funded by donations from hundreds of supporters around the world. He calmly eschewed criticism of his theories and talked matter-of-factly about his communication with aliens and his belief in time travel. When asked by a skeptical interviewer if he was perhaps unbalanced or had experienced and “emotional upset,” Van Tassel replied wryly: “I’ve never had an emotional upset other than women.”

“Science continually disproves its own theories,” he explained about his willingness to believe. “This is the only gauge by which man can record progress. Even time is only recognized as it passes and events recorded after they happen. Man accepts three-dimensional theory, because the illusion is understandable to his limited thinking. With applied, undisturbed effort, man can develop his all-dimensional sense of being, and record time and events in the future, as well as present and past.”

But Van Tassel’s beliefs about the fluid and unreliable nature of time were in many ways a reflection on mortality. “The biggest trouble on this planet is, that when you get smart enough to do something with the knowledge you have acquired here, death intervenes,” he wrote. “Our life span is just too short.” Van Tassel’s solution to old age was “a high voltage electrostatic generator that would supply a broad range of frequencies to recharge cellular structure.” By recharging cells through electromagnetism, we could turn back the clock, thereby extending life span, he said. It wasn’t about transporting people through time—the aim of his time machine was to turn back the clock, to give our physical bodies more time. He compared it to charging a car battery—although as the professor Bates points out, the concept of charging cells is, like many of Van Tassel’s ideas, “too vague a concept to be considered a testable conjecture.”

Testable or not, Van Tassel directed his skeptics to consider the known-yet-invisible entities of gravity, oxygen, electricity, and magnetism, as well as the limits of our five senses which restrict us to a narrow experience of the known spectrums of light, sound, and smell. Humans have the capacity to see less than 1 percent of the electromagnetic spectrum, he noted in his writing, which means both birds and bees have the ability to see things we cannot. “Still, people go around saying, ‘I won’t believe something unless I see it,’” he wrote.

He was determined to provide his naysayers with irrefutable evidence in the form of his rejuvenation machine—which he believed would offer proof his alien encounter while benefiting mankind immeasurably.

The science behind the Integratron is based on electromagnetics. In his quarterly magazine Proceedings , Van Tassel described the ongoing construction of the building to his followers:

The armature, 55 feet in diameter, has been the most difficult part of this whole project. Requirements for anti-friction, expansion and contraction from heat and cold, and wet and dry conditions, have made this armature a mechanical wonder. Four times larger in diameter than the largest armature ever built, it floats on 16 Teflon-bearing blocks which are supplied with compressed air to "float" the armature on air. One-hundred and twenty pounds of air in each bearing block literally floats this 1,700 Pound spinner. The 64 Aluminum collectors are about to be mounted on the spinner.

The rotating armature was to be outfitted with 64 “static collectors” made of aluminum—capable of gathering 50,000 volts of static electricity from the air and delivering it to the cells of the participants inside. A large coiled copper wire running through the center of the building was also planned to aid conduction. Those undergoing the treatment were meant to receive this energy while stationed inside the machine, wearing all-white outfits. But while Van Tassel revealed much about his plans for the Integratron he also kept many of the details necessary for completing the project to himself. Van Tassel died of a heart attack in 1978—although apparently those who knew him to be in good health found his passing suspicious. His epitaph supposedly read: “Birth through Induction, Death by Short Circuit.”

Lacking funds, the necessary blueprints for completion, and their charismatic leader, the Integratron project soon stalled. The building was sold to a man who planned to turn it into a disco. It sat empty for years. Van Tassel’s equipment disappeared—making it difficult to determine just how much of his vision he had constructed before his death. It was bought by three sisters in 2000 who opened the building to the public and now promote it as a place of healing as well as advertising its unusual acoustic properties—the musicians Moby and Jason Mraz have both recorded there.

A healing sound bath session was fully booked on the day I visited. The group was a mix of young, curious East Coast tourists, and one gentleman from Los Angeles who confided this was his fourth visit—that after his first experience, he’d immediately booked again, and again. None of us was there hoping to become younger—we weren’t there for Van Tassel’s hopeful pseudo-scientific promises. But while the Integratron appears to have transcended its original purpose, now a standard stopover for visitors to Joshua Tree National Park and day trippers from Palm Springs, it still seems to provide something else intangible and appealing to its many modern-day pilgrims.

It’s a kind of cosmic or psychic architecture, mused Craig Hodgetts, a UCLA professor and partner of Hodgetts + Fung Design and Architecture, when asked about the continuing popularity of Van Tassel's dome. Along with pyramids, he noted that domes are purported to have “a kind of physical presence that’s supposed to be transformative towards the spiritual,” citing the Pantheon in Rome as well as the more modern geodesic domes of Buckminster Fuller. A dome is a platonic solid, it has centrality, it focuses on the center—it’s conceptually pure. So when we as travelers are drawn to the Integratron’s white dome rising out of the desert, or converge around I.M. Pei’s glass pyramid in the courtyard of the Louvre, Hodgetts suggests that kind of psychic architecture could be filling a basic, unmet need we all have relative to our more mundane environments—a kind of, “look over there, it’s something pure,” he suggests. “You have to take that dome as an article of faith that it works,” he said of the Integratron. “So it reaches all the way back into prehistory with a need we all have for a reflection of some universal principles. It’s a primitive thing.”

The current owners declined to be interviewed, saying, “we prefer that people glean their own experience directly.” And while the Integratron in its current state is far from what Van Tassel had envisioned, listening to a woman play a series of quartz bowls as part of a healing sound bath—in an “acoustically perfect” building designed for time travel and communication with extraterrestrials—still feels otherworldly.

Distractify

This Donald Trump Time Travel Conspiracy Theory Is Far-Fetched, but Mind-Blowing

Michelle Stein - Author

PUBLISHED Jun. 23 2020, 2:16 p.m. ET

UPDATED Jun. 23 2020, 2:16 p.m. ET

Conspiracy theories exist for practically every major historical event there is — and there are plenty of far-out-there explanations for minor happenings, too. While it may be entertaining to read about these far-fetched tales of what "really" happened, more often than not, in-person witnesses and other proof can debunk most conspiracy theories. (Because facts and reality and all that jazz.)

With this in mind, a Donald Trump time travel conspiracy theory exists — and there are definitely some eerie coincidences involved. 

Let's take a closer look at the details, along with the "evidence" that exists to back it up. Because although the POTUS has managed to further politically divide the nation during his time in office, this conspiracy theory about Trump is a doozy.

This Donald Trump time travel conspiracy theory is based on books from the 1890s.

OK, so the gist of this Trump-related conspiracy theory goes something like this: Donald Trump and his family time-traveled from a distant time to the current day with the goal of ruling over the U.S.

An odd set of coincidences serves as "proof" that this is true, and they stem from two books published in the 1890s. The books are titled Baron Trump’s Marvelous Underground Journey and The Last President — and they were both written by Ingersoll Lockwood. ( Snopes.com writer Dan Evon , among many others, has confirmed the books really do exist.)

The Baron Trump book features a story about a boy who finds a secret portal and time travels. And although his first name is spelled differently than the POTUS's son — who spells it "Barron" — there are some compelling coincidences if you look more closely.

"Trump’s adventures begin in Russia and are guided thanks to directions provided by ‘the master of all masters,' a man named ‘Don,’" according to Snopes. "Before leaving for his voyage through the unknown, Trump is told of his family’s motto: ‘The pathway to glory is strewn with pitfalls and danger.’” 

So far, we've got a character named Baron Trump who is guided by a man named Don. But here's where things get really creepy.

me at 10:00 pm: i really need to get in bed early tonight me at 2:00 am: wow this conspiracy theory about donald trump being a time traveler is really compelling pic.twitter.com/lLatWvSzVG — Kaitlyn Essman (@kaitlynessman9) January 24, 2019

Meanwhile in The Last President , Lockwood begins his story in New York City in early November. People in the book were in a panicked outrage following the election of an "enormously opposed outsider candidate." (Sound familiar?)

"The entire East Side is in a state of uproar," police officers shouted through the streets, warning city folk to stay indoors for the night, according to Newsweek . "Mobs of vast size are organizing under the lead of anarchists and socialists, and threaten to plunder and despoil the houses of the rich who have wronged and oppressed them for so many years."

The thing is, the man who won that presidency was highly wealthy and lived on 5th Avenue. (Hmmm, Trump Tower is located on 5th Avenue.) And after Lockwood's character becomes president, one of the first people he chose for his cabinet was a man named Lafe Pence. (No, it's not Mike, but come on .)

Unnerving, right?

Can’t get over that Donald trump time travel conspiracy theory 😂😂 — JayC (@Jaycroke18) January 18, 2019

But how would Donald Trump have access to a time machine, anyway?

The conspiracy theorists have an answer to this question, too: Nikola Tesla.

John Trump — who was Donald Trump's uncle and also an electrical engineer from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) — evaluated the papers just weeks after Nikola was found dead, according to History.com . He determined they were “primarily of a speculative, philosophical and promotional character," also noting the papers did “not include new sound, workable principles or methods for realizing such results."

Through the years, Nikola's papers have been declassified — but some of his files are still missing to this day. Could they have included the blueprints for a time machine? That's what the conspiracy theory has convinced some people of, at least.

There's a conspiracy theory that Donald Trump got ahold of Nikola Tesla's notes (his uncle had them) and found out how to time travel pic.twitter.com/gUtVSajXlf — My Name Is James (@_JamesGtfo) January 31, 2017

OK, so Donald Trump didn't really travel in time with the help of a time machine blueprint stolen from Nikola Tesla by his uncle, John Trump. However, the books written by Ingersoll Lockwood really do exist. And you have to admit, the parallels are mind-blowing AF.

Who votes that this time-traveling Trump conspiracy theory should be made into a sci-fi movie? (Hey, we'd watch it.)

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The Philadelphia Experiment: the Ship that Passed the Confines Between Space and Time

Legend tells of the destroyer, the uss eldridge which suddenly disappeared from the port of philadelphia to reappear in norfolk in a flash of green light.

On 28 October 1943, at exactly 17:15, the destroyer from the United States Navy, Eldridge , at anchor in the port of Philadelphia, disappeared under a flash of green light. A few minutes later, the warship reappeared in the waters in front of Norfolk , 500 kilometres further north. It then, once again, disappeared, returning to Philadelphia , in the same exact spot from whence it vanished.

The – real – story of the American destroyer, Tulsa, invisible to radar thanks to stealth technology which we shared in this article in Liguria Nautica, could not but bring back to mind the fantastic legend of the Eldridge. The ship where two scientists of the calibre of Albert Einstein and Nikola Tesla , had, in great secret, experimented tele-transportation .

Science fiction? Also. The legend of the destroyer that for a few minutes travelled through space and time, was too enticing for lovers of the mystery genre, and it was taken up by a number of Hollywood films, among which the most famous was “ The Philadelphia Experiment ” directed by Stewart Raffill (1984), which was such a box office hit that nine years later, a sequel was made: “The Philadelphia Experiment 2”.

Without including books that are well known by enthusiasts like “Thin air” by George E. Simpson and Neal R. Burger, “Invisible horizons: true mysteries of the sea” by Vincent Gaddis or “Without a Trace” by Charles Berlitz , an author who is well-known for his book on the Bermuda Triangle. There is also an avalanche of comics among which we need to mention one of our favourites, the archaeologist of the impossible Martin Mystere , whose adventures are published by Bonelli , and which picks up the story in some of its comic books like “Sulle tracce dell’invisibile – Tracking the Invisible”.

But what is real in the legend of the Eldridge? It all began with a strange character, who really existed, by the name of Morris K. Jessup . A strange mix of scientist with no degree and staunch ufologist. Jessup spent his time looking for UFOs to catalogue the aliens within and fighting with NASA declaring, on homemade pamphlets, that rocket fuelled propulsion was not the way to conquer space. He had formulated a series of theories based on electromagnetic fields that, according to him, were much more functional to launch our spaceships into space. Theories that the aliens shared with him.

One day in 1955, Mr Jessup received a letter signed by a mysterious Carlos Miguel Allende , who claimed he was an eye witness to the disappearance of the destroyer, Eldridge, as, at the time of the experiment, he was working as a marine on the Furuseth which was anchored beside it.

Jessup and Allende – a person who was never found as he sent his letters using a return address for an abandoned farm inhabited by ghosts – exchanged, over the next few months, intense correspondence, and with every letter, new, increasingly disturbing information emerged. The Navy was experimenting with the dangerous and uncontrollable technique of tele-transportation , using enormous coils created by Tesla, as a defence from Nazi submarines (in 1943 we were in the middle of the second world war).

The experiment did not go well: the ship was indeed tele-transported for 500 kilometres back and forth but many members of the crew were lost in the space time “continuum” and never returned. The Navy then decided to suspend the experimentation of this dangerous technique and subjected all the surviving sailors to hypnosis , as well as the witnesses of the event, to make them forget what had happened.

An image of the USS Eldridge at sea

What is really incredible is that many people believed Allende’s declarations, who then said his real name was Carl M. Allen, made through Jessup. Journalists started looking for the sailors of the Eldridge and the Furuseth. It was then discovered that this Furuseth, on the day of the experiment, was sailing in another ocean, but this did not make a dent in the iron-clad certainty of many of Mr Jessup’s supporters, who explained that all of this was part of a plot put into action by the Navy . The journalists also found other witnesses, ready to swear that it was all true.

Among these, the most famous was Alfred Bielek , who claimed he was one of the sailors lost in the dimensional jump and was catapulted for 6 weeks into the year 2137 and then 2 years in 2749. To explain how on earth he had managed to return to the present, Bielek put into play another physics genius, John Von Neumann , who was apparently only able to turn off the electromagnetic equipment, which was still working on board the ship, in 1983.

Bielek became a real celebrity and the talk shows fought over him, offering thousands of dollars . He never let down his listeners and told so many tales we cannot possibly share them all in this article. To those who noted that his stories didn’t all flow together, he would respond: “Well… after three jumps through space and time, it is normal that my memory is a bit jumbled, wouldn’t you say?”.

Argomenti: Eldridge , sea tales

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I seen a ship all black about a football long floating over my house in Las Vegas off of Alta and Cimmarron I swear I never seen a ship look so advanced in my life . Must of been from the future . Me and my friend both seen it . I jumped in my truck and took off never to see it again . I can only think how lucky we were to see such a ship . It was around the same time they talk of this amuamua rock in space . People laugh but that shit was real

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Can a book on this be purchased?

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those Tesla coils are for real they are the real deal and how dear them throw Edison in there still won’t give Tesla his due props

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It states below in this article that Norfolk is 500 km north of Philadelphia, south not north.. On 28 October 1943, at exactly 17:15, the destroyer from the United States Navy, Eldridge, at anchor in the port of Philadelphia, disappeared under a flash of green light. A few minutes later, the warship reappeared in the waters in front of Norfolk, 500 kilometres further north. It then, once again, disappeared, returning to Philadelphia, in the same exact spot from whence it vanished.

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I swear that has to be fake. But our government won’t let the people know the truth about anything we they have the right to and there might be technology that we couldn’t even think of that our government has from Tesla but won’t let us know

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There has got to be ( let’s just say ). A linear magnetic field. That exists within the Earth’s atmosphere. This same linear magnetic field was the pathway for the USS Aldridge to disappear from Pennsylvania for an instant. Appearing in Virginia, then reappearing in Pennsylvania. Without a logical explanation of why all of a sudden the quick reappearance. To where it had never moved in the first place. Never beeing propelled by the ship’s engine’s. There was some force strong enough. Capable of catapulting or sending the whole ship. Thru that linear magnetic field. Back to where it had been all the time in the first place. Obviously the US Navy Department was rattled by this unseen force. Whatever it may be. ?. I don’t think the US Navy would go out of their way. To actually use Hypnosis to make their sailors forget what really happened that day in 1943. There has to be a really strong reason for them to go ahead and do it ?. Think about it that one ..?. Also to coroborate what Dj stated in his comment. Yes the people have a right to know the real story. About what really happened inside the USS Eldridge. But of course. The real story like the old saying. ” Truth is stranger then fiction “. If the real truth involves a higher being ?. Then you or I will never hear the real truth. There’s too many insiders from too many covert interest groups. Behind this real story. Hiding the real truth.!!. You probably guessed it. .It’s not in their best interest. To let you or I know. There’s a higher being out ther. In the linear magnetic field .

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tesla time travel machine

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On 5 december 1872, off the coast of the azores islands, a merchant ship encounters a ghost ship. these are the theories..

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Image that reads Space Place and links to spaceplace.nasa.gov.

Is Time Travel Possible?

We all travel in time! We travel one year in time between birthdays, for example. And we are all traveling in time at approximately the same speed: 1 second per second.

We typically experience time at one second per second. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

NASA's space telescopes also give us a way to look back in time. Telescopes help us see stars and galaxies that are very far away . It takes a long time for the light from faraway galaxies to reach us. So, when we look into the sky with a telescope, we are seeing what those stars and galaxies looked like a very long time ago.

However, when we think of the phrase "time travel," we are usually thinking of traveling faster than 1 second per second. That kind of time travel sounds like something you'd only see in movies or science fiction books. Could it be real? Science says yes!

Image of galaxies, taken by the Hubble Space Telescope.

This image from the Hubble Space Telescope shows galaxies that are very far away as they existed a very long time ago. Credit: NASA, ESA and R. Thompson (Univ. Arizona)

How do we know that time travel is possible?

More than 100 years ago, a famous scientist named Albert Einstein came up with an idea about how time works. He called it relativity. This theory says that time and space are linked together. Einstein also said our universe has a speed limit: nothing can travel faster than the speed of light (186,000 miles per second).

Einstein's theory of relativity says that space and time are linked together. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

What does this mean for time travel? Well, according to this theory, the faster you travel, the slower you experience time. Scientists have done some experiments to show that this is true.

For example, there was an experiment that used two clocks set to the exact same time. One clock stayed on Earth, while the other flew in an airplane (going in the same direction Earth rotates).

After the airplane flew around the world, scientists compared the two clocks. The clock on the fast-moving airplane was slightly behind the clock on the ground. So, the clock on the airplane was traveling slightly slower in time than 1 second per second.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Can we use time travel in everyday life?

We can't use a time machine to travel hundreds of years into the past or future. That kind of time travel only happens in books and movies. But the math of time travel does affect the things we use every day.

For example, we use GPS satellites to help us figure out how to get to new places. (Check out our video about how GPS satellites work .) NASA scientists also use a high-accuracy version of GPS to keep track of where satellites are in space. But did you know that GPS relies on time-travel calculations to help you get around town?

GPS satellites orbit around Earth very quickly at about 8,700 miles (14,000 kilometers) per hour. This slows down GPS satellite clocks by a small fraction of a second (similar to the airplane example above).

Illustration of GPS satellites orbiting around Earth

GPS satellites orbit around Earth at about 8,700 miles (14,000 kilometers) per hour. Credit: GPS.gov

However, the satellites are also orbiting Earth about 12,550 miles (20,200 km) above the surface. This actually speeds up GPS satellite clocks by a slighter larger fraction of a second.

Here's how: Einstein's theory also says that gravity curves space and time, causing the passage of time to slow down. High up where the satellites orbit, Earth's gravity is much weaker. This causes the clocks on GPS satellites to run faster than clocks on the ground.

The combined result is that the clocks on GPS satellites experience time at a rate slightly faster than 1 second per second. Luckily, scientists can use math to correct these differences in time.

Illustration of a hand holding a phone with a maps application active.

If scientists didn't correct the GPS clocks, there would be big problems. GPS satellites wouldn't be able to correctly calculate their position or yours. The errors would add up to a few miles each day, which is a big deal. GPS maps might think your home is nowhere near where it actually is!

In Summary:

Yes, time travel is indeed a real thing. But it's not quite what you've probably seen in the movies. Under certain conditions, it is possible to experience time passing at a different rate than 1 second per second. And there are important reasons why we need to understand this real-world form of time travel.

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Nikola Tesla: Secret Time Travel Experiments

Commander X delves into the secret time travel experiments of Nikola Tesla. Long before the disastrous Philadelphia Experiment, partially based on Tesla-technology, Nikola Tesla discovered by accident the secrets of traveling through time and the inherent dangers of tampering with the cosmic framework that governs the laws of time and space.

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Nikola Tesla’s Time Travel Experiment: I Could See The Past, Present And Future, All At The Same Time’

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The idea that humans are able to travel in time has captured the imagination of millions around the globe.

If we look back at history, we will find numerous texts that can be interpreted as evidence of time travel.

When Albert Einstein published his theory of relativity in 1905, it created a buzz in the scientific community, opening the page for many questions such as, “time travel, a possibility?”

There is even evidence of time travel in the Bible according to  Erick von Daniken :

“In the Bible, the prophet Jeremiah was sitting together with a few of his friends, and there was a young boy. His name was Abimelech, and Jeremiah said to Abimelech, “Go out of Jerusalem, there is a hill and collect some figs for us.”

The boy went out and collected the fresh figs. All of a sudden, Abimelech hears some noise and wind in the air, and he becomes unconscious, he had a blackout.

After a time, he wakes up again, and he saw it was nearly the evening. So when he runs back to the society and the city was full of strange soldiers.

And he says, “What’s going on here? Where are Jeremiah and all the others?” And an old man said, “That was 62 years ago.” It’s a time travel story written in the Bible. – Von Däniken.

If we look at the Mahabharata, written in the eighth century BC, King Raivata is described as traveling to the heavens to meet with the creator god Brahma, only to return to Earth hundreds of years in the future.

In Japan, the legend of Urashima Taro describes the tale of a fisherman’s visit to the protector god of the sea, Ryūjin, in an underwater palace for what seemed like only three days. When he returns to his fishing village, he finds that it’s been 300 years that he’s been gone.

Maybe all of these ‘myths’ inspired great thinkers to try and figure out a way to achieving time travel.

Not long ago, a team of scientists from the University of Queensland, Australia, have simulated how time-traveling photons might behave, indicating that at least on a QUANTUM LEVE, the grandfather paradox – which demonstrates how time travel is not possible — can be resolved.

Using photons – single particles of light — researchers simulated quantum particles traveling to the past. After studying their behaviors, researchers revealed possible anomalous aspects of modern-day physics.

However, it seems that Nikola Tesla may have worked on time travel before modern science even thought it was possible.

According to reports, in 1895 Tesla made a shocking discovery suggesting that time and space could be influenced by magnetic fields.

Allegedly, this idea – that one could alter time and space by magnetic fields — led to a number of experiments that allegedly gave birth to the infamous Philadelphia project – considered mostly a hoax.

It is believed that Tesla worked on the idea of time travel, discovering amazing results along the way.

Using magnetic fields, Tesla found that the space-time barrier could be ‘altered’ and accessed by creating a ‘trojan horse’ which eventually led to a different time.

However, it is still unclear whether or not Tesla actually achieved this as there are no documents whatsoever that prove – or for that case — disprove something like this occurred.

The only thing we do know is that reports state that in 1895, a witness found Tesla at a small coffee shop looking shaken and disturbed. His assistant claimed that Tesla was almost electrocuted by a machine as Tesla was trying to solve the time travel riddle.

After nearly dying, Tesla claimed he had found himself in an entirely different time and space window, where he could see the past, present, and future at the same time while staying within the artificially created ‘magnetic field.’

Regrettably, there are no documents – which we were able to find – to back up these claims. However, if Tesla tried to achieve time travel, he surely wasn’t the only scientist to try.

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tesla time travel machine

Nikola Tesla Worked On A Time Machine “I Could See The Past, Present And Future All At The Same Time”

Before that endeavor happened as expected, Tesla was finding astounding substance as to time, space and the opportunity of time travel. With the use of these alluring fields, Tesla found that presence could be manhandled or gotten to by making a doorway that could provoke a substitute time.

Notwithstanding this amazing disclosure, Tesla showed full care that time travel was significant stuff just to change. One area in the future could thoroughly change and wreck the current schedule.

tesla time travel machine

Tesla’s first trial and error of time travel happened in March of 1895. One columnist said that they found Tesla at a little bistro, yet he looked extremely shaken and obviously had as of late taken 3.5 million volts of his body. The voltage almost killed Tesla on the spot, yet his accomplice ended the power of the machine from taking his life.

Notwithstanding for all intents and purposes passing on, he said that he wound up in a by and large special climate and time window. Tesla said that he was good for seeing the past, present and future all at the same time while being entangled in this alluring field. Notwithstanding having the choice to see all of this he noticed he was crippled from all the power the wattage was doing to his body, which provoked his partner unwinding the machine.

tesla time travel machine

The very same exercises would end up occurring during the Philadelphia Project. At any rate the delayed consequences of that preliminary turned out to be truly miserable.

Perhaps the reasoning for Tesla practically passing on from testing is that individuals are not planned to change any sorts of time and that embracing reality for what it is the best decision.

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Elon Musk says Tesla and SpaceX are collaborating on the new Roadster

  • The long-awaited Tesla Roadster return is going to have "some rocket technology."
  • Musk has dangled a return for the Roadster since 2017.
  • Details about the Tesla-SpaceX collaboration are still sparse.

Insider Today

The long-awaited second-generation Tesla Roadster is engineered to go where no car has gone before, CEO Elon Musk said.

In a recent interview with ex-CNN anchor Don Lemon , Musk revealed that Tesla is collaborating with SpaceX on the reincarnation of the Roadster, Tesla's iconic electric sports car.

Musk wouldn't directly answer questions about whether the Roadster could fly, only saying such a feature is not "out of the question."

"It's gonna be really cool, and it's gonna have some rocket technology in it," Musk said. "The only way to do something that's cooler than the Cybertruck is to combine SpaceX and Tesla technology to create something that's not even really a car."

The original Roadster put Tesla on the map

The Tesla Roadster put Musk's electric car company on the map in the late aughts, with about 2,450 of the limited-edition sports cars sold between 2008 and 2012. Musk has been promising a return for the Roadster since 2017 , teasing a new version of the sports car at the unveiling of the Tesla Semi.

Related stories

Since then, the Roadster has run into myriad production delays and has fallen out of the conversation as Cybertruck took the spotlight at the end of last year. But Musk posted about renewed design goals for the Roadster on his social media platform X (formerly Twitter) in February.

Musk has said before the new Roadster will come with an estimated price tag of around $200,000 for a base model. Tesla would justify that eye-popping sticker price with "something that's never existed before," Musk told Lemon.

"It will do 0-60 [mph] in under one second," Musk said. "And that's not even the most exciting thing about it."

What else we know about the new Roadster

Lemon pressed for more details, but Musk was sparing, confirming only that it would be controlled with a drive-by-wire yoke similar to those found in planes and it that would be equipped with tires.

When asked whether the Tesla- SpaceX Roadster collaboration would have wings, Musk hesitated.

"It does not have big wings, big wings would be unwieldy on the road," he said.

Musk has often dangled hype for the Roadster when the company's stock price is suffering, or new product launches are hitting snags. Tesla stock is down nearly 14% in the past month. Meanwhile, the EV company is offering referral program incentives on Cybertruck orders, often an early sign of flagging demand.

Still, Musk said in the interview that Cybertruck still has over a million orders in the queue.

Watch: How did Tesla's bulletproof Cybertruck become so expensive and so delayed?

tesla time travel machine

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COMMENTS

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    7. Tesla's Personal Encounter with Time Travel. Tesla's relentless pursuit of scientific knowledge and innovation led to a personal encounter with the intriguing and, at times, perilous world of time travel. During one of his experiments, he subjected himself to an astonishingly powerful shock of 5 million volts.

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  7. Nikola Tesla's Time Travel Experience: "I Could See Past, Present And

    Nikola Tesla was obsessed with time travel. He worked on a time machine and reportedly succeeded, saying: 'I could see the past, present and future all at the same time.' The idea that humans are able to travel in time has captured the imagination of millions around the globe.

  8. The Mystery of Nikola Tesla's Missing Files

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    The story of Van Tassel's time-travel dome begins under a rock—yes, an actual rock—where he lived. It was here, a few miles from Landers, that the inventor established an airport which he ...

  11. Nikola Tesla time travel experiment: "I saw the past, present and

    His assistant claimed that Tesla was almost electrocuted by a machine as Tesla was trying to solve the time travel riddle. In a New York Times article dated 21 April 1908 on page 5, column 6 with a heading "How the Electrician's Lamp May Construct New Worlds", Nikola Tesla is quoted of mankind's mastery of the physical universe, by ...

  12. This Donald Trump Time Travel Conspiracy Theory Is Way out There

    OK, so Donald Trump didn't really travel in time with the help of a time machine blueprint stolen from Nikola Tesla by his uncle, John Trump.However, the books written by Ingersoll Lockwood really do exist. And you have to admit, the parallels are mind-blowing AF. Who votes that this time-traveling Trump conspiracy theory should be made into a sci-fi movie?

  13. (PDF) Time Machine for Past and Future Travel

    Playing with Pets, Playing with Machines, Playing with Futures. Jody Berland. Kevin Warwick. PDF | On Sep 5, 2020, Manu Mitra published Time Machine for Past and Future Travel | Find, read and ...

  14. The Philadelphia Experiment: the Ship that Passed the Confines Between

    The legend of the destroyer that for a few minutes travelled through space and time, was too enticing for lovers of the mystery genre, and it was taken up by a number of Hollywood films, among which the most famous was "The Philadelphia Experiment" directed by Stewart Raffill (1984), which was such a box office hit that nine years later, a ...

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    Watch how Mike "Mad Man" Marcum claimed to build a backyard time machine and travel to the past and future in this intriguing video.

  16. Nikola Tesla: Time Travel Secret

    Did you know that time travel was mentioned in the Bible, many years before scientists today even fathomed that any such concept could exist? As a matter of ...

  17. Is Time Travel Possible?

    In Summary: Yes, time travel is indeed a real thing. But it's not quite what you've probably seen in the movies. Under certain conditions, it is possible to experience time passing at a different rate than 1 second per second. And there are important reasons why we need to understand this real-world form of time travel.

  18. Nikola Tesla's Time Travel Experiment- He Could see the past, present

    Apparently, Tesla too was obsessed with time travel. He worked on a time machine and reportedly succeeded, stating: 'I could see the past, present, and future all at the same time. It looks like Nikola Tesla may have worked on time travel before modern science even thought of its possibility. In 1895, as per his reports, he suggested that ...

  19. Nikola Tesla: Secret Time Travel Experiments

    Commander X delves into the secret time travel experiments of Nikola Tesla. Long before the disastrous Philadelphia Experiment, partially based on Tesla-technology, Nikola Tesla discovered by accident the secrets of traveling through time and the inherent dangers of tampering with the cosmic framework that governs the laws of time and space.

  20. Nikola Tesla and time travel ( Don't try it at home )

    Above is a video about time travel. There are different aspects about this topic, but focus on Tesla's attempt to create time machine, because it looks like easiest way to make it. According to this video, Tesla made time machine using rotating magnetic field. You can hear about it in this video at 9:10 - 10:33 and at 13:50 It very easy to ...

  21. Nikola Tesla's Time Travel Experiment: I Could See The Past, Present

    Apparently, Nikola Tesla too was obsessed with time travel. He worked on a time machine and reportedly succeeded, saying: 'I could see the past, present, and future all at the same time.' The idea that humans are able to travel in time has captured the imagination of millions around the globe. If we look back at history,…

  22. Nikola Tesla Worked On A Time Machine "I Could See The Past, Present

    Before that endeavor happened as expected, Tesla was finding astounding substance as to time, space and the opportunity of time travel. With the use of these alluring fields, Tesla found that presence could be manhandled or gotten to by making a doorway that could provoke a substitute time. Notwithstanding this amazing disclosure, Tesla showed full…

  23. Where Is The Time Travel Machine? #timetravel #nikolatesla # ...

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  24. New Tesla Roadster Will Have SpaceX Technology, Elon Musk Says

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