The Philadelphia Experiment
The Philadelphia Experiment of 1943 was intended to develop technology designed to make US Navy ships invisible to enemy radar. At that time, the US was fighting mightily to gain the upperhand during World War II.
Scientists wanted to harness an electromagnetic field that could provide cover for ships, deflect radio signals and thus make them invisible on radar screens. In the fall of that year, tests were conducted on the USS Eldridge to see if the plan worked. The ship actually disappeared from radar. But what was truly not anticipated was that the Eldridge, together with its crew, also vanished completely from the Navy shipyard in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and mysteriously reappeared in Norfolk, Virginia without lifting anchor. Scientists were now busy with what they unexpectedly had in their hands. It was a case of the ship and its men not just hidden from radar detection but actually sent into time travel mode and thrust into a condition outside of the space-time continuum.
The Philadelphia Experiment had accidentally uncovered time travel and the new science of time dynamics which meant the possible existence of multidimensional realities or space-time continuums.
After World War II, scientists continued with experiments in time which weren't just confined to invisibility but explored dynamics in time travel as well as multi-dimensional realities.
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