> — and if the universe cooperates —
The Universe does not cooperate. It is man that has to find the working quantum physics.
>some of those particles will transform into
>mirror-image versions of themselves,
No. The mirrors are already there. They are staggered inside the light-barrier. The problem is getting inside the barrier.
>allowing them to tunnel right through the wall.
Correct. But one has to penetrate the light-barrier first!
>And if that happens, Broussard will have uncovered the first
>evidence of a mirror world right alongside our own.
Well...the mirror worlds are called dimensions. And that does not mean you will find copies of yourself existing there. It is just another realmed dimension where life is existing in different illuminations, etc.
tonzal
Volume 2, page 139
Link to PDF book
: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
: Scientists are searching for a mirror universe. It could be
: sitting right in front of you.
: If the "mirrorverse" exists, upcoming experiments
: involving subatomic particles could reveal it.
: June 30, 2019 - By Corey S. Powell
: At Oak Ridge National Laboratory in eastern Tennessee,
: physicist Leah Broussard is trying to open a portal to a
: parallel universe.
: She calls it an “oscillation” that would lead her to “mirror
: matter,” but the idea is fundamentally the same. In a
: series of experiments she plans to run at Oak Ridge this
: summer, Broussard will send a beam of subatomic particles
: down a 50-foot tunnel, past a powerful magnet and into an
: impenetrable wall. If the setup is just right — and if the
: universe cooperates — some of those particles will
: transform into mirror-image versions of themselves,
: allowing them to tunnel right through the wall. And if that
: happens, Broussard will have uncovered the first evidence
: of a mirror world right alongside our own.
: “It’s pretty wacky,” Broussard says of her mind-bending
: exploration.
: The mirror world, assuming it exists, would have its own laws
: of mirror-physics and its own mirror-history. You wouldn’t
: find a mirror version of yourself there (and no evil Spock
: with a goatee — sorry "Star Trek" fans). But
: current theory allows that you might find mirror atoms and
: mirror rocks, maybe even mirror planets and stars.
: Collectively, they could form an entire shadow world, just
: as real as our own but almost completely cut off from us.
: Broussard says her initial search for the mirror world won’t
: be especially difficult. “This is a pretty straightforward
: experiment that we cobbled together with parts we found
: lying around, using equipment and resources we already had
: available at Oak Ridge,” she says. But if she unequivocally
: detects even a single mirror particle, it would prove that
: the visible universe is only half of what is out there —
: and that the known laws of physics are only half of a much
: broader set of rules.
: “If you discover something new like that, the game totally
: changes,” Broussard says.
: Ten seconds that rocked physics
: As with many grand scientific quests, the hunt for mirror
: matter grew out of a small, seemingly esoteric mystery.
: Starting in the 1990s, physicists developed high-precision
: experiments to study how neutrons — particles found in the
: nuclei of atoms — break down into protons, a process
: related to radioactivity. But those experiments took a
: strange turn.
: Researchers found that neutrons created in particle beams,
: similar to the one Broussard will use, last 14 minutes and
: 48 seconds, on average, before “decaying” into protons. But
: neutrons stored in a laboratory bottle seem to break down a
: bit faster, in 14 minutes and 38 seconds.
: Ten seconds might not sound like much, but the actual
: difference should be zero: All neutrons are exactly the
: same, and their behavior should depend not one bit on where
: or how they are examined.
: “I take discrepancy very seriously,” says Benjamin Grinstein,
: a particle-physics expert at the University of California,
: San Diego. “It’s not just between two experiments. It is a
: collection of many experiments done independently by
: several groups. The newest experiments, conceived in part
: to resolve the disagreement, have “only made it worse,” he
: adds.
: ~~~~~ continue at ~~~~~
:
: https://www.nbcnews.com/mach/science/scientists-are-searching-mirror-universe-it-could-be-sitting-right-ncna1023206?utm_source=pocket-newtab#anchor-Lifeonthefarside