H.G Wells time machine (Science fiction version)
So sometimes has been introduced ideas, that the rotating plate would be replaced with the acceleration ring, where particle accelerator would drive ions in the speed of the light. The energy for that machine would get from the small nuclear reactor, which uses some kind of super heavy radioactive elements for getting enough high energy.
The probe to the future
But how we would come back? When we are looking closer to the images, what are taken of this hypothetical thing, we could create an idea about the probe to the future. In this case, the plate would be surrounded by a particle accelerator, which would drive the particles in the tube near the speed of the light.
In this case, the time machine would have the parabolic antenna, which makes the tiny wormhole in the form of this system. Then the electromagnetic black hole would synchronize with another black hole, which is in the laboratory, and that system can send the data through this wormhole to the past. And in some visions, this system has the human-looking robots, what are getting data, and then transmit it through the wormhole.
When H.G Wells created an idea of the time machine he just thought that if the plate of the time machine would rotate opposite to the Earth, that means that the stored energy of the plate would be conducted back to planet Earth. Then some geniuses thought that flying the ultrafast spacecraft against the rotation movement of the galaxy and after the Hubble has put the Milky Way to its place the movement against the rotation movement of the universe would remove the energy, and take the time machine to the past.
The idea, what those men created was quite simple. They must only find the absolute stable point in the universe, and the lack of energy would return the astronauts to the past. The idea was taken from the ball-shaped universe. But as we know, we haven't yet find the point of absolute stopped movement in the universe. These kinds of things are fascinating and also futuristic.
Image:
http://the-wanderling.com/hg_wells04.jpg
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