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Time Machines & Experiments
Help building a divergence meter?
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<blockquote data-quote="Apri1" data-source="post: 171508" data-attributes="member: 10340"><p>This is a pet project of mine for quite some time now. Mostly brainstorming, and a bit of experimentation. Unfortunately my efforts haven't succeeded quite yet. I'm looking to build a functional and proper divergence meter (such as the one in the anime Steins;Gate). But I'm unfortunately at a loss. Perhaps a bit due to my lack of physics knowledge, as well as my inability to quickly test my experiments.</p><p></p><p>My first attempt has been to take hashes of various files that contain content that I know differs among various timelines. Using those hashes I then construct a larger 'divergence value' which I can observe. To date, the number hasn't changed, despite changing timelines. Partially because much of the content remained the same, but also due to the lack of resolution within the files (that failed to capture the smaller changes).</p><p></p><p>You can find the meter itself, along with the source code on the ZeroNet site it's hosted: <a href="http://127.0.0.1:43110/1B2G4C4wiygqq87AMeExdwyiSLeVPksKj4/" target="_blank">http://127.0.0.1:43110/1B2G4C4wiygqq87AMeExdwyiSLeVPksKj4/</a></p><p></p><p>You'll need <a href="https://zeronet.io/" target="_blank">ZeroNet</a> to access the site.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]7289[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>If anyone has any ideas for the next version and test, I'm all ears. So far I've received a recommendation to try: taking a battery from one timeline to another and then measuring the voltage (I doubt this would work, and I can't physically bring things between timelines anyway), and to measure the various traits of elementary particles (I see no reason this would work.)</p><p></p><p>All in all, a sad attempt. I can't seem to find anything clearly definitive of a particular timeline, and it seems most time travel claims fail to even address the topic and question.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Apri1, post: 171508, member: 10340"] This is a pet project of mine for quite some time now. Mostly brainstorming, and a bit of experimentation. Unfortunately my efforts haven't succeeded quite yet. I'm looking to build a functional and proper divergence meter (such as the one in the anime Steins;Gate). But I'm unfortunately at a loss. Perhaps a bit due to my lack of physics knowledge, as well as my inability to quickly test my experiments. My first attempt has been to take hashes of various files that contain content that I know differs among various timelines. Using those hashes I then construct a larger 'divergence value' which I can observe. To date, the number hasn't changed, despite changing timelines. Partially because much of the content remained the same, but also due to the lack of resolution within the files (that failed to capture the smaller changes). You can find the meter itself, along with the source code on the ZeroNet site it's hosted: [URL]http://127.0.0.1:43110/1B2G4C4wiygqq87AMeExdwyiSLeVPksKj4/[/URL] You'll need [URL='https://zeronet.io/']ZeroNet[/URL] to access the site. [ATTACH=full]7289[/ATTACH] If anyone has any ideas for the next version and test, I'm all ears. So far I've received a recommendation to try: taking a battery from one timeline to another and then measuring the voltage (I doubt this would work, and I can't physically bring things between timelines anyway), and to measure the various traits of elementary particles (I see no reason this would work.) All in all, a sad attempt. I can't seem to find anything clearly definitive of a particular timeline, and it seems most time travel claims fail to even address the topic and question. [/QUOTE]
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