Lernen Sie, wie man teleportation in einem Englisch Satz verwendet. Über 17 handverlesene Beispiele.
He's a physicist working on teleportation.
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People thought that teleportation was impossible, but by the 24th century, teleportation of large objects and even people became common, much like the microwave oven back in the 21st century.
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Through the centuries, teleportation accelerated space exploration, even beyond the Solar System.
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Teleportation became a stable means of transportation by the 24th century.
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By the 22nd century, teleportation of large objects, including animals, became a reality.
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"Shirley, some speculate that instead of space vessels, it may be teleportation as the way to go into space." "Miraculous, Glen."
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Would faster-than-light travel be possible in the future? We know that in current science, it seems impossible. There are possible workarounds like folding spacetime itself. The Japanese-American physicist Michio Kaku advocates teleportation.
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The Japanese-American physicist Michio Kaku predicts that teleportation will be key in space travel.
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Larry Niven explores the theme of teleportation and its impact on society in the Ringworld sci-fi franchise and the newer book Red Tide.
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Maybe read the article "Quantum teleportation between light and matter."
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Michio Kaku, a Japanese-American physicist and author, envisions that teleportation would be key in future space exploration. The technology is still embryonic today.
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It is the 2nd of July of 2015. My friend Yaroslav is from the Ukraine, an ex-Soviet republic, and he grew up in the Soviet Era, when the ruble was money, but communism was the objective. He said that those good ol' childhood years were the best for him, and he feels nostalgic about them. Yaroslav has been a seaman engineer for some years. He has moved to Canada, and he studies English now, Russian being his first language and Ukrainian second. His original hair was near black, but is now whitening. He has blue eyes. He still looks like a big teenager. He is a pizza delivery man now at my local pizzeria, here at Lulu Island. We both discuss many deep, intellectual things at the pizza parlour, whilst he waits to go off for a delivery. He likes reading drama books, like Tolstoy. He likes drama movies, too. Unlike me, whose hobby is speculative fiction and astronomy, Yaroslav talks little of such things. My impression of Soviets were that they were all space-savvy. But he did mention once that within 1000 years, humanity will have to be really serious about space travel and out-of-Earth colonization, because our own Earth may fall into decay. I think that he tried to paraphrase Stephen Hawking the physicist. Yaroslav does not know Star Trek too well. I talked to him about teleportation, which scientists around the world are researching. They think that teleportation is not impossible.
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Gustavo was studying quantum teleportation.
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Gustavo cast a teleportation spell, teleporting him to his palace.
Gustavo left by teleportation.
The progress is slow for such things as space exploration, space travel, teleportation, cure for the common cold, cure for cancer, and other wishful things, because we currently rely on human knowledge and human intelligence. Wait until smarter-than-human machine intelligence arises, then the progress may accelerate. The future at this moment may be unimaginable.
It seems that Elon Musk is wondering why the Japanese are not firing rockets into space as crazily, and as frequently, as his SpaceX. My guess is that the Japanese are waiting for better technology, waiting until there is a better time (maybe now is too early), waiting for lower costs, or waiting for a big war (inevitable for some) that would shake global politics and destroy the status quo. There are proponents of teleportation, as Michio Kaku, a Japanese-American physicist, futurologist, and writer. The Japanese do not have the same "now, now, now" culture as the Americans. Their "now" culture comes from the mindfulness of the present moment, Zen, unlike American. Many Japanese like also futurology, which has become a religion on its own, there. Elon Musk and others may think that safe teleportation may be a long, long time from now, if ever. In the interim period until such technology would arise, sophisticated rockets may be the only way to get to another planet. Elon Musk has been correct many times, judging from his material and financial successes. (He has admitted that maybe a self-sustaining society on Mars and a "multiplanetary" human civilization would probably arise after his own lifetime.) Americans like "brute force," but maybe it is not the Japanese way. The Japanese have a much longer view of time than do the Americans. They believe in spirits everywhere in nature (Animism) that Americans maybe do not sense.