Media outlets from around the world used research out of the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa to promote a theory about parallel universes. The headlines caught the attention of many but the problem is that the UH research and NASA, the sponsor of that research, had nothing to do with the theory.
11:05:59 UT - Mercury (20 ge 22'3") conjunct Echeclus (20 ge 22'3")
15:42:41 UT - Mercury (20 ge 41'32") square Neptune (20 pi 41'32") )
16:33:52 UT - Neptune (20 pi 44'27") square Echeclus (20 ge 44'27")
17:38:24 UT - Mercury (27 ge 8'13") opposite Galactic Center (27 sa 8'13")
That did not stop the Daily Star, an United Kingdom based newspaper, from this story on May 17, “NASA scientists detect parallel universe ‘next to ours’ where time runs backwards” that cited the UH research. The New York Post, the Thrillist and other media outlets followed with similar articles, that also cited the UH based research.
The research by UH Mānoa physics professor Peter Gorham of the Department of Physics and Astronomy
discovered that some cosmic-ray events observed in Antarctica have
characteristics that are in tension with the standard model of particle
physics. Gorham and his team used the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna
to detect radio pulses which arise from a burst of high-energy
particles erupting from the ice that resemble an upside-down cosmic-ray
air shower. The sudden interest in the work had led to Gorham, who is
responsible for the research, being misquoted in some stories and the UH News story on his work from December 10, 2018, “UH professor’s Antarctica discovery may herald new model of physics,” has been misinterpreted by many journalists taking the inaccurate parallel universe story at face value.
“This whole parallel universe thing was not invented by us but
somehow we have gotten tagged with it,” said Gorham. “A journalist got
it wrong, tied it to us and it has unfortunately snowballed. We actually
had nothing to do with the development of the parallel universe idea.”
Demonstrating the sudden interest in the story, the UH News
story on Gorham’s work received more than 8,408 hits from Tuesday, May
19 until the morning of Thursday, May 21. Before that, the story had
received 834 hits in all of 2020.
“Unfortunately the journalism on this has not distinguished very well
between our experimental work which identified some anomalies in the
data, and the theory proposed by some physicists who are not a part of
our collaboration,” said Gorham. “While I am not opposed to free
speculation regarding the anomalies we have observed, our own opinion is
that they are more likely to be explained in terms of physics, that is
likely to be much less exotic.”
Centaur, TNO & Asteroid Aspectarian http://serennu.com/astrology/aspectarians.php
Galactic Anomalies http://www.philipsedgwick.com/Galactic/GalacticLinks.htmSource: hawaii.edu/
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