Physicist to test for endochronic properties of entangled photons
'It probably won't work', says University of Washington physicist John Cramer, who will try to split photons. The next step will be to test for quantum 'retrocausality'. Going for a blast into the real past, If the experiment works, a signal could be received before it's sent.
This phenomenon was first described in The Endochronic Properties of Resublimated Thiotimoline (1948), by I. Asimov, during his doctoral research. Thiotimoline is notable for the fact that when it is mixed with water, the chemical actually begins to break down before it contacts the water. This is explained by the fact that in the thiotimoline molecule, there is at least one carbon atom such that, while two of the carbon's four chemical bonds lie in normal space and time, one of the bonds projects into the future and another into the past.
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