The Man Who Conquered Time (ebok) av John E. Muller
Gratis utdrag
John E. Muller (forfatter), Lionel Fanthorpe (forfatter), Patricia Fanthorpe (forfatter)

The Man Who Conquered Time ebok

20,70,-
Darryl Whitesmith was engaged upon a new line of research at the Horological Central Institute. He was familiar with the famous saying of Minkowski: "From henceforth space in itself and time in itself sink to mere shadows and only a kind of union of the two preserves an independent existence." But he had no idea to what extent that saying would be borne upon him. It was difficult for Darryl's mi…
Darryl Whitesmith was engaged upon a new line of research at the Horological Central Institute. He was familiar with the famous saying of Minkowski: "From henceforth space in itself and time in itself sink to mere shadows and only a kind of union of the two preserves an independent existence." But he had no idea to what extent that saying would be borne upon him. It was difficult for Darryl's mind to make the transition from subjective to objective time, but once that transition had been made there was no turning back. It began as a simple experiment, an experiment which concerned space-time, relativity and the four dimensional continuum. Whitemith's first indication that something was wrong was when the clock on the wall raced backwards in a blur of speed to fast to follow. The laboratory faded, day and night blended into a welter of greyness. He was back in the Jurassic Age - but not for long. The machine was still dragging him back into the remote epochs of the Past...

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Forfattere John E. Muller (forfatter), Lionel Fanthorpe (forfatter), Patricia Fanthorpe (forfatter)
Forlag Gateway
Utgitt 11.12.2016
Sjanger Skjønnlitteratur, Fantasy og science fiction
Språk English
Format epub
DRM-beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781473204430
Darryl Whitesmith was engaged upon a new line of research at the Horological Central Institute. He was familiar with the famous saying of Minkowski: "From henceforth space in itself and time in itself sink to mere shadows and only a kind of union of the two preserves an independent existence." But he had no idea to what extent that saying would be borne upon him. It was difficult for Darryl's mind to make the transition from subjective to objective time, but once that transition had been made there was no turning back. It began as a simple experiment, an experiment which concerned space-time, relativity and the four dimensional continuum. Whitemith's first indication that something was wrong was when the clock on the wall raced backwards in a blur of speed to fast to follow. The laboratory faded, day and night blended into a welter of greyness. He was back in the Jurassic Age - but not for long. The machine was still dragging him back into the remote epochs of the Past...