His documents were issued by the Soviet Union, which no longer existed, and his birth date indicated he was born in 1932, making him 74, but he looked no older than 25.
He saw an object shaped like a bell moving erratically, which he later photographed.
Sergei's story was consistent and detailed, and the photographs he took were of Kiev in the 1950s, which seemed to corroborate his claims.
He was last seen in his room, and despite cameras and metal bars on the windows, he vanished without a trace.
He was found with outdated clothing, a copper token from an unknown bar, a bill from a stable, and $70 in old banknotes, along with a letter dated 1876.
He was skeptical of the supernatural elements and didn't want to convince his colleagues of the possibility of time travel.
They depicted yellow human-like beings wearing spacesuits, which Bhagat believed were aliens.
They represented the sun and the moon, showing how the heavenly bodies reacted to Christ's crucifixion.
There were inconsistencies in dates and times, and the photographs were likely manipulated using techniques available at the time.
It originated from a short story by Jack Finney titled 'I'm Scared,' which was published as fiction in Collier's Magazine.
准备好被你听过的最奇怪的时间旅行和UFO故事震撼到。这些故事将让你质疑你对现实的所有认知。
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On April 23rd, 2006, a man in his early 20s was seen in Kiev, Ukraine, staring at a high-rise apartment building. Witnesses described him as looking confused and anxious. They thought he might have been a lost tourist. The man approached two police officers and nervously asked for directions to a place that no longer existed. The officers asked the young man for identification. There were two problems with his ID.
One, his documents were issued by the Soviet Union, which no longer existed. The second problem? According to his birth date, this young man was born in 1932.
In 2011, a Russian documentary called The Time Traveler told the story of Sergei Ponomarenko, who seemed to be slipping in and out of time. Eyewitnesses first saw Ponomarenko standing at an intersection in Kiev, looking confused and a little frightened. He was described as being in his early 20s and wearing clothes that looked new but were 50 years out of fashion.
Panamarenko was asking everyone he met how to get to Peshtaniya Street, but nobody had ever heard of it. His strange behavior caught the attention of police officer Sergei Onopenko and his partner who approached him. Again, Panamarenko wanted directions to Peshtaniya Street. When he tried to find the street on a map, all that was there was a landfill. Officer Onopenko now noticed Sergei's vintage clothing, which looked brand new.
He also noticed that Sergei was wearing an antique camera around his neck, which also looked new. But what really caught the police officer's attention was Sergei's identification. According to the document, Sergei was born in Kiev in 1932. That should make him 74. But here he was looking no older than 25.
What surprised me most was his identification papers. The papers were dated 1958, but they were like new. There was a photograph that looked similar to this man, but I didn't see how it could be him. I assumed this person was out of his mind and had to get him to a psychiatrist.
Sergei Ponomarenko didn't want to see a psychiatrist, but his options were that or be arrested for vagrancy and easy choice. So Sergei was taken to a private psychiatric clinic where everything was captured on video. And that's when things get really strange.
Sergei Ponomarenko didn't want to go to a psychiatric clinic. You can see him on CCTV acting agitated and nervous. The receptionist said when he arrived, he became even more confused. I remember he kept looking at my mobile phone, just staring at it. He didn't want to give me his coat or his camera or any of his belongings.
After a few minutes, Dr. Pavel Kritikov called Sergei into his office. At first, Sergei said nothing. He just stared at the clock hanging on the wall. He was clearly confused, possibly even in shock. If you don't talk to me, I can't help you.
I'm not sure you can help me. What day is it today? The last thing I remember, it was Wednesday in 1958. I don't know. - Dr. Kritikoff said he'd seen patients who create stories like this as a defense mechanism. Some people who experience severe trauma or stress sometimes try to escape from reality. They get lost in their delusion. But in Sergei's case, something was different.
What's your name and where are you from? Did you say 1958? You don't look older than maybe 30 years old. Are you saying this is the future for you? Do you remember how you ended up here? My name is Sergei Potomarenko. I was born in Kyiv on June 20th, 1932. I'm 25 years old.
Sergey told the doctor he had the day off from work, so he took his camera and walked around the city. At some point, he looked up into the sky and saw an object shaped like a bell moving erratically. The doctor asked if he was describing a UFO, but Sergey had never heard that word before. Sergey said it's too hard to describe. It'd be easier to just develop the film.
Dr. Kritikov agreed to develop Sergei's film. While waiting for the photographs, Kritikov wanted Sergei to stay in the clinic for a few days for observation. At that point, the doctor realized that Sergei kept looking at the clock on the wall. The clock stopped. How long have we been here? So Dr. Kritikov checked his watch and noticed that it also had stopped.
The clock on the wall showed half past one, the same time as when Serrier came in, but we'd been talking for at least half an hour.
When Sergei returned to the lobby, the clocks in the doctor's office started working again. At this point, Dr. Kritikov didn't fully believe Sergei's story, but he was intrigued by what might be in the photos. However, developing the film would be a challenge. Sergei's camera was a Yashima Flex. Although it would have been a new camera in 1958, it hadn't been manufactured in 40 years.
Sergey's film was from the 1950s, which meant it was much different from what we use today.
Back then, there were no cloud storage platforms or digital photos. Before the 1960s, film was made from cellulose acetate, which can last for up to 50 years. However, it must be stored under certain conditions: a temperature of under 70 degrees Fahrenheit and less than 40% humidity. Even so, this type of film was known to degrade over the years.
Some films even develop something called vinegar syndrome. It occurs when the cellulose acetate rots, shrinks and cracks, releasing a stench that smells a lot like vinegar, hence the name. But the film wasn't over 40 years old, and there didn't seem to be an odor, at least according to Sergei. From Sergei's perspective, he had just purchased the film. It was practically brand new, and unsurprisingly, it developed just fine.
The pictures looked familiar to Dr. Kritikov. He recognized Kiev, but the photographs were of Kiev in the 1950s. Another photo showed Sergei Ponomarenko sitting in front of a house. Dr. Kritikov noticed that Sergei came to his office wearing the same clothes as in the photograph, clothes that looked clean and new. Another picture showed a young woman in her early 20s. Kritikov assumed this was Sergei's girlfriend.
The final photograph was the most amazing one of all. In the sky above the city, an object shaped like a bell, just as Sergei described. On Sergei's third day in the clinic, he had another session with Dr. Kritikov to discuss the photos. So can you tell me what's wrong with me? I just want to go home.
Yes, I took this picture, but I don't understand what it is. I took the photograph and then I seem to appear in a different world. I don't really think you're sick, but there are some things we still need to figure out. We need to talk about the photographs taken from your camera. I'm most interested in this one. Please take a look. It looks like a bell or something in the sky. Do you know what this is? Is this a UFO? A UFO? A UFO?
After the session, Sergei went to his room in the clinic. When the hospital staff checked in on him, he was nowhere to be found. Not in his room, not in the hallways, not anywhere. Sergei Ponomarenko was gone.
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When Sergei Ponomarenko went to his room at the clinic, that was the last time anyone saw him. Even though there were cameras on the only exit and his windows were covered with metal bars, he somehow disappeared. Even if the window is open, it's impossible to climb through the bars. There's only one entrance and exit. All that was left is a newspaper and his notes with the doctor's questions.
Dr. Krutikov contacted the police to locate him. Officer Onopenko went to the address that Sergei put on his intake form at the clinic. Of course, nothing was there. But they learned that Sergei's apartment building had been torn down and the residents had been moved to a larger building nearby, which had been built in the early 1960s and was still standing.
By digging through the building's records, Onipanko found that Sergei did in fact live in that building, and he lived there for 20 years. And that's where Sergei's story hits another snag. Because, according to police records, Sergei Potomarenko was missing. The police report contained a picture of Sergei, who looked like the man we saw earlier, about 20 years old. He was seen leaving his building in 1978 with his camera and was never seen again.
But Sergei's file contained something else interesting. In 1958, he was interviewed on a radio program where he made predictions about the future. Tribute to the...
Hello, listeners. Today, our guest is an inventor, the head of the Young Technicians Group, Sergey Palomarenko. He has some incredible predictions about the science of the future. Hello, Sergey. Hi. Thanks for having me on. I want to talk about the wonderful future that awaits us. Sergey went on to describe how artificial hearts will be used in the future and phones will no longer need wires. What really fascinated Sergey was the microwave.
Though old Soviet files contained plenty of information about Sergei, they were no closer to locating him.
Then the police had an idea. There might be a person who could shed some light on Sergei Ponomarenko and what might have happened to him, the woman in the photographs. Her name was Valentina Koulis, and she was still alive. Tracking Sergei Ponomarenko was difficult. He appeared out of nowhere in 2006 and disappeared a few days later. He reappeared sometime in the past, made accurate predictions about the future, and then disappeared again.
But Sergei left behind the photographs he'd taken before he went missing the first time. In those photographs was a picture of a young woman. Her name was Valentina Koulis, and she was still living in the apartment building where Sergei was last seen.
Valentina said that she and Sergei were good friends for many years, but he went missing in 1978 and was presumed dead. His belongings were thrown away and his apartment was sold. But Valentina did have a picture of him. It was such a long time ago. I only had one good picture left.
This was taken in 1958. They compared Valentina's photo to the pictures on Sergei's camera. They were pictures of the same people wearing the same clothes taken on the same day. Valentina asked what this was about, and the police and Dr. Kritikov said they were looking for a man who claimed to be Sergei and that it might be someone mentally ill claiming they traveled in time. Valentina stared at the men for a long moment.
Then she took out an envelope. She said that a few years ago she came home one day and in her mailbox was an envelope with no postmark or writing of any kind. Inside the envelope was a picture of Sergei.
When compared to the picture at the time of his disappearance, he hadn't aged at all. But even more strange was the photograph's background. The Motherland statue was over Sergei's right shoulder. There's no question that this was Kiev. Investigators went to the exact spot where Sergei took the picture. They found the location. But the rest of the skyline was wrong. Kiev didn't have all the skyscrapers that were in Sergei's photo. At least, not yet.
On the back of the photograph was a message to Valentina written in Sergei's own hand. "Dearest Valentina, everything is fine with me. I'll try to return when I can. Yours, Sergei."
It would seem that Sergei Ponomarenko had jumped into the future once again. But considering how Big Kiev looked in the photos, and given what the city has endured recently, there's no way to tell just how far into the future Sergei traveled. But it was obviously pretty far. Some sources say Ponomarenko dated that photo 2050.
As of 2011, when the documentary was released, Sergei had not reached out to Valentina, nor was he spotted anywhere in the city. If we're going to solve this mystery, we're apparently going to have to wait a long, long time. The concept of time travel has been a staple of science fiction for a long time. In 1770, Louis-Sebastien Mercier wrote the book The Year 2440, in which the hero travels centuries into the future.
Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, written in 1843, explored time travel in both directions. But the story that really kicked off the genre was H.G. Wells' The Time Machine, written in 1895. But those are works of fiction. Is time travel really possible? And if so, how? Well, we know that traveling into the future is possible. In 1905, Einstein published his special theory of relativity.
In that, he described how moving clocks tick more slowly than stationary ones. The faster you move, the slower time moves. So if you want to travel 100 years into the future, what you do is take a spaceship that can travel at 99.995% the speed of light, then fly somewhere 50 light years away, turn around and come back. On Earth, 100 years have passed. But because you were going so fast, the trip only took a year.
Time travel. This theory has been proven in the real world. If you put an extremely accurate clock on a plane and fly it in the same direction that the Earth spins, when you land, that clock will be slightly behind the clocks on Earth. That's special relativity. In 1915, Einstein published the theory of general relativity.
This theory describes gravity as a geometric property of spacetime, otherwise known as four-dimensional space. It describes how spacetime is like a fabric or continuum that curves around whatever matter happens to be present. General relativity is a lot, but for the purpose of this episode, it boils down to this. The higher the gravity, the slower time moves. This is called gravitational time dilation.
Remember in Interstellar there's that scene where Matthew McConaughey and the crew land on that planet near the black hole? The gravity is so severe that for every hour they spend on the planet, seven years passes on Earth. A Les McConaughey example is, GPS satellites are about 12,000 miles above the Earth's surface. There is less gravity, which means time moves faster up there.
Time on the satellites has to be adjusted to match the slower moving time down here on the surface. Otherwise, GPS wouldn't work.
Another way to explain it uses renowned scientist Carl Sagan's twin paradox. It's called that because he illustrated the concept with two identical twins. Let's say one stays on Earth while the other travels to space at the speed of light. For reference, that's 186,000 miles per second, extremely fast. Time moves quicker for the twin in space. Meanwhile, the twin on Earth ages at the normal rate.
Depending on how long the space twin is away, these identical twins could end up a decade apart. Or that twin could slow down and return from space to an era far, far in the future, where their other twin is long dead. But all of that is time travel into the future. What about time travel to the past?
Well, that's a bit more theoretical and controversial. Not all physicists believe it's possible, but Einstein's theories say it is possible. It's achieved by bending or warping spacetime so much that you can take a shortcut from point A to point B, a shortcut that lets you move faster than light.
If you can somehow move faster than light and get space-time to wrap around itself like a cylinder, you travel back in time, in theory. But doing something like this would require a lot of energy, possibly all the energy of an exploding star. Obviously, our civilization can't do this, but a very advanced civilization could.
On the surface, the topics of time travel and UFOs don't seem to be related at all. But it's hard to talk about one without the other because some believe that UFOs are actually time machines. Could that be true in Sergei Ponomarenko's case? And how did he get a photo of the UFO when he had no idea what they were? If Sergei was born in 1932, he was aged 25 in 1957.
Five years earlier, in 1952, U.S. Air Force Captain Edward J. Ruppelt created the term UFO. He used it to describe any sky objects that experts couldn't identify. It seemed to be strictly an American turn of phrase. Even so, Ruppelt and the Air Force kept receiving reports of UFOs in the air. He started Project Blue Book to keep track of them all.
From 1952 until 1969, the document contained over 12,000 sightings. That's a lot of close encounters. Suddenly, people were talking about UFOs across the United States. But remember, it was also the height of the Cold War. It was a tense time, with panic in the air and fear of a nuclear attack. Some people were scared these flying objects could be Soviet secret planes. They thought another world war could break out at any moment.
For others, well, theories abound. They thought these flying objects could be aliens from another planet. Groups and organizations who believed in and investigated UFOs emerged and grew. They insisted that the U.S. government was keeping aliens under wraps and hiding who these beings really were. ♪
One theory is that extraterrestrials pilot UFOs. But there's also another theory to consider. It says UFOs are being flown by humans from the future. This idea may date back to 1975 when ufologist Jacques Vallée published his book The Invisible College. He wrote that the passengers and drivers of the UFOs could be humans from another period.
This theory gained further steam in the early 1990s thanks to two of the most famous scientists in the world. In 1992, the esteemed physicist Stephen Hawking published a paper in the Physical Review.
The paper was titled Chronology Protection Conjecture. It argued that the laws of physics made the time warping of space-time impossible. In a 1999 episode of the PBS series Nova, Hawking said that time travel might be possible, but according to him, we'd already have proof if it did work.
time travel might be possible. But if that is the case, why haven't we been overrun by tourists from the future? Later in the episode, another renowned scientist, Carl Sagan, rebutted this point with a theory of his own. In a separate interview, Sagan believed we could be living among time travelers who are in disguise. This argument I find very dubious. It might be that time travel into the past
is possible but they haven't gotten to our time yet they're very far in the future
And the further back in time you go, the more expensive it is. Then there's the possibility that they're here, and we do see them, but we call them something else. UFOs or ghosts. Naturally, Hawking also had a counter-argument to Sagan's reasoning. I think that if people from the future were going to show themselves, they would do so in a more obvious way.
What would be the point of revealing themselves owned to cranks and weirdos? Who wouldn't he be believed? The scientists' dueling viewpoints were fascinating, but they had to agree to disagree. Let's take a closer look at Sagan's theory. What if UFOs were just humans in the future? And what if Sergey Ponomarenko was one of them?
In 2019, Montana Technological University professor Michael Masters published the book Identified Flying Objects. In it, he pointed out that technology is rapidly advancing every day. And at some point in the future, he believes humans finally figured out how to time travel. Whether they found a wormhole or warped time and space successfully, they did it.
As a result, those people have been traveling across time in identified flying objects, especially since most close encounters describe them as bipedal, hairless, and with large brains. These visitors tend to communicate with humans in our languages. Their technology also seems to be built upon the foundations of our current machinery.
They sound just like us, but more evolved. Masters calls them extra-tempestuals.
It's important to note that Masters' research is still evolving, but he does see it as being the simplest explanation for UFOs. As for Sergei Ponomarenko, he was 25 years old in both 1957 and 2006. He didn't come from a distant future. Instead, he came from the past and moved forward to 2050 at one point.
He had a Yashima Flex camera that contained a photo of a UFO. That could have been his method of transportation. A UFO filled with people from the future may have picked him up and left him in another time. Sergei may not have remembered any of it, though. So is that what happened to Sergei Ponomarenko when he took a picture of the UFO? Did he travel with humans from the future across time? Did they all somehow enter a wormhole or a tear in the fabric of space-time?
Well, he hasn't been the only visitor who unwillingly traveled into the future.
In June 1950, Sergei Ponomarenko was 18 years old in the Soviet Union. Meanwhile in New York City, a 29-year-old man named Rudolf Fentz walked into Times Square. It was 11 o'clock at night and he was disoriented. He looked around the bustling landmark in shock. Fentz stared at the cars zooming by. He gazed up at massive billboards, confused.
At first glance, Fence seemed like a lost tourist. In busy Times Square, though, he didn't attract much attention. That is, until he walked from the sidewalk into an intersection while the traffic light was green. In the blink of an eye, a speeding taxi hit Fence. Bystanders called the authorities, but the man died from his injuries before they arrived. Fence was transported to the local morgue, where officials tried to identify this mysterious man.
As they addressed him, the coroner noticed Fence's jacket and hat were very outdated. They weren't from this century. The officials searched Fence's pockets and found a copper token for one beer at a local bar. But no one recognized the bar's name on the coin, so they searched the city's phone book. Next, authorities stumbled upon a bill from a stable for a horse and carriage fare. No one recognized the stable's name either.
In another pocket, they found $70 in banknotes. But these types of bills were extremely old. In fact, they hadn't been used in the United States since the 1800s. Ultimately, the coroner found some identifying information. There was a business card with the man's name, Rudolph Fence, and his local address. He wasn't a tourist after all. He lived on Manhattan's famous Fifth Avenue.
The last item discovered was a letter Fence received from a friend. His Fifth Avenue address was listed on the piece of paper, but the date on it was 1876, 74 years earlier, a time after the Civil War but before the World Wars. How could this be? Well, Fence was clearly a man from another time.
The coroner handed off the case of 29-year-old Rudolph Fentz's death to the police. The NYPD assigned it to the missing persons department. Authorities thought he might match the description of someone else who was reported missing.
Captain Hubert V. Rim took the case. First, he went to Fence's address on Fifth Avenue, which was no longer a home. It was a small business. When Rim spoke to the owner, they had never heard of Fence. But Rim kept looking. He couldn't find a missing person's report that matched Fence's description. Rim checked to see if Fence's fingerprints were on file anywhere. No dice.
Then Rim scanned the phone book, an old-fashioned public register of people's addresses and phone numbers. There was no sign of Fence. The captain didn't stop there, though. He searched through past phone books, too. Fence wasn't listed in any of them in the 1940s. When Rim looked through the 1939 edition, he spotted a familiar name listed. It was Rudolph Fence.
Jr. Again, Rimm visited the address, which was an apartment building. He asked residents if they knew Fence's son, but only a few remembered him. They described Fence Jr. as a man in his 60s who moved away in 1940. No one could recall where he ended up. Rimm continued to follow this lead. He investigated Fence Jr. and discovered he died in 1945.
But his wife was alive and well in Florida, so Rims sent her a letter asking for more information on her husband's father. A few weeks later, she wrote back with some startling information. In the letter, she confirmed her husband's father was indeed the Rudolph Fence who was alive in the 1870s, but he disappeared when he was a young man around 29 years old.
准备好被你听过的最奇怪的时间旅行和UFO故事震撼到。这些故事将让你质疑你对现实的所有认知。
</context> <raw_text>0 Rimm立即查看了从1876年开始的失踪人员档案。在那里,他发现了老年鲁道夫·芬茨的名字与一份报告相关联。报告中提到,芬茨在某个晚上大约10点钟在城市散步。他最后一次被看到是在时代广场。
报告详细描述了芬茨在1950年出现时所穿的相同衣物。这证明芬茨通过某种时代广场的虫洞从1876年穿越到了1950年。对于警长来说,这个案子相当简单,对吧?嗯,不完全是。
Rim警长面临着一个两难的境地。芬茨穿越岁月的证据就在眼前,但他对此持怀疑态度。而且他工作的警察局可能不相信任何超自然的事情。他不想试图说服同事们这件事是可能的。他甚至不确定自己是否相信这一点。整个事情对他的口味来说太奇怪了。因此,Rim只是将此案标记为未解决并关闭了它。
尽管如此,芬茨的故事依然流传开来。听到这个故事的人们推测,这个人可能在1876年掉进了其中一个虫洞,这就是他如何来到1950年的原因。其他人,比如Rim警长,根本不认为这是真的。但芬茨是否可能在与谢尔盖·波诺马连科相同的情况下进行时间旅行?如果Rim进一步调查,他是否会发现UFO也参与其中?
这些时间旅行者是否只是在向未来运输?不,还有证据表明UFO也曾旅行到过去。在20世纪和21世纪,我们很幸运拥有捕捉图像的设备,如照片、胶卷和视频。早期的时代没有那么幸运,但他们以其他方式记录了他们所看到的,比如艺术,像是绘画。人们画下他们的周围环境和发生在他们身上的事情。
让我们回到公元前10,000年,远在谢尔盖·波诺马连科、卡尔·萨根或阿尔伯特·爱因斯坦出生之前。那是中石器时代。早期人类使用基本的石器工具,用鹿角、骨头和木头制作箭和矛。这是农业的黎明,意味着人们开始耕作,他们通过在洞穴中绘画来表达他们的创造力。
在印度中部,考古学家J.R. Bhagat研究了在恰蒂斯加尔州发现的1万年前的洞穴画。
这些画描绘了一排用红色勾勒出的黄色类人形生物。画中没有进一步的细节,使它们显得有些不对劲。在一些洞穴图像中,他们穿着宇航服,而在其他图像中,他们的鼻子和嘴巴缺失。Bogat在他的专业领域中认为他们是外星人。他说这些早期人类可能见过这些生物,这激发了这些画作,并可能影响了当地的传说。
在该地区的村庄里,人们世代相传着故事,包括关于Rohela的小生物,他们从天空中的圆形飞行物中降临。听起来熟悉吗?他们听起来和看起来像UFO。在一些画作中,圆形飞船有天线和底部的三条线,可能代表着它的着陆装置。
但这些位于印度中部的古代画作并不是唯一展示UFO和外星人的作品。跳到11000年后。洞穴画不再流行。相反,这些奇怪的图像开始出现在一个更现代的神圣场所,教堂。1350年,有人画了一幅耶稣基督被钉十字架的大幅插图,位于科索沃的一座教堂中。
在维索基·德卡尼修道院内,这幅图像占据了三个面板。在中间,基督被描绘在十字架上。其余的面板包含可能是门徒、罗马人或旁观者的人物。他们围绕着耶稣,观看并等待,似乎在某种城堡中。有些人甚至手持矛和盾。
但看看整个艺术作品的右上角和左上角,你会看到一些奇怪的东西。两个人在小舱中穿越天空。一个是金色的,另一个是银色的。两者似乎都在移动。它们看起来像太空舱。那么,谁能在14世纪驾驶这些呢?外星人?未来的人类?
再次强调,我们不知道是谁创作了这幅画,但我们可以猜测他们可能经历过某种接触。现在快进到16世纪的罗马尼亚特兰西瓦尼亚地区。没错,德古拉的故乡,但他与这个故事无关。在一个名为锡吉肖阿拉的小镇上,修道院教堂在火灾后重建。
但在重建不久后,一幅标记为1523年的奇怪新画作出现在墙上。图像描绘了一座被火焰和烟雾吞噬的教堂式建筑。
在建筑上方的天空中漂浮着一个神秘的圆顶物体。在飞船顶部,有一束微弱的橙色光束照亮了它上方的云层。你猜对了,它看起来就像一个UFO。看起来这艘飞船引发了火灾。画作中包含了一句诗篇,上面写着,以色列,要把你的希望寄托在主身上。也许艺术家希望上帝或更高的力量能够拯救教堂免于火灾和UFO的侵袭。
否则,这句话与画作的关系并不完全清楚,或者这只是教堂墙壁上的另一句随机诗篇。此外,我们不知道是谁画了这幅图像,或者他们是否与外星人有过接触以激发这幅艺术。UFO是否可能最初就引发了教堂的火灾?没人知道。
然而,这些例子清楚地表明,外星人和UFO可能早于我们所有人,并可能在过去和现在飞行。这些外星人和UFO真的像卡尔·萨根所推测的那样是时间旅行者吗?时间旅行者是否像谢尔盖·波诺马连科一样秘密地在人类中间行走?他们是否在历史上一直这样做?好吧,现在我们听到了谢尔盖·波诺马连科的故事,我们已经确定时间旅行在理论上是可能的。
我们甚至讨论了UFO可能并不是外星人的观点。它们可能是像谢尔盖一样的时间旅行人类。我们考察了另一个名为鲁道夫·芬茨的时间旅行者在纽约市的故事。我们还考察了一些最早的洞穴画和教堂艺术,这些作品描绘了UFO。那么这一切都是真的吗?不。
但我找到的每一篇关于谢尔盖·波诺马连科故事的文章和视频似乎都是对彼此版本的重述。而这些版本都不正确。
今天你将了解到真实的故事,因为我能够追踪到原始的完整纪录片并将其从俄语翻译过来,这并不容易。纪录片中有一些事情指向了一个骗局。首先,片尾的演员导演。但也许那是为了戏剧化的场景。好吧。但警察说谢尔盖出现在2006年4月23日星期二。什么?
而大堂的摄像头显示的是4月23日星期三。但他们都是错的。4月23日实际上是一个星期天。在他第一次就诊时,谢尔盖告诉医生他出生于1932年6月,但他的身份证上显示他出生于3月。谢尔盖第二次就诊是在4月26日上午10:39。但这应该是接下来的那一天,4月27日。
当谢尔盖走下走廊到他的房间时,这应该是第三天,但摄像头仍然显示是4月26日,而现在出于某种原因是星期五,因此日期和时间都混乱不堪。接下来,警察在他的失踪人员报告中拥有的谢尔盖的照片,是他发送给瓦伦蒂娜的同一张照片。
他的面部表情不同,但他被数字化老化,因此制作人可能这样做是为了让他看起来更真实。现在,这些细节是优秀调查员会注意到的。
除此之外,Yashima Flex相机的胶卷可能已经40年了,或者可能相对较新,而不是因为时间旅行。商店直到1990年代仍在销售那种胶卷。因此在2006年,纤维素可能只有大约10到15年,这就是为什么它似乎发展得很好。
来自2050年的谢尔盖照片显示几座相同的摩天大楼,仅在大小上有所不同,这在城市以其独特的建筑而闻名时相当可疑。
Photoshop并不存在于现在的样子,但当时有其他方法可以操纵和编辑图像,比如将照片的部分拼接在一起,制作出一张看起来统一的照片,并将其作为未来的瞥见。因此,是的,这个故事是假的,但我仍然认为这是我遇到过的最好的时间旅行故事之一。演员们很有说服力,只要你不太关注,照片也很棒。
顺便说一下,你可以在Y-Files YouTube频道上看到所有这些照片和视频。现在,鲁道夫·芬茨的故事也有一条复杂的真相之路。
1972年,这个故事发表在《边界研究杂志》上。没错,那是一本真正的学术期刊。所以这意味着它必须是真的,对吧?好吧,这似乎是大家的共识。这个故事作为城市传说流传了几十年。在2000年,一位名叫克里斯·奥布雷赫特的民俗研究者看到这个故事在一本西班牙杂志中重新出现,并决定调查其起源。
奥布雷赫特追溯到1953年一本名为《来自画廊的声音》的书,作者是拉尔夫·M·霍兰德。但后来他发现这本书是抄袭他人故事的。
鲁道夫·芬茨故事的绝对起源是一篇名为《我害怕》的短篇小说,作者是杰克·芬尼。它作为虚构作品发表在《科利尔杂志》上。芬尼的名字应该听起来很熟悉。他写了著名的小说《尸体窃贼》。这是另一个被证明是虚构而非事实的时间旅行故事。
至于UFO和时间旅行人类,这是一个有趣的理论,但仅仅是理论。卡尔·萨根以理论的术语进行讨论,但也常常说没有人真的知道确切的答案。我们可能永远无法真正知道他的假设是否成立,即时间旅行者是否秘密地在我们中间游荡。我们只是不具备任何证据。
写过关于UFO和时间旅行的书的教授迈克尔·马斯特斯也不完全确定。他承认他没有太多证据。根据他的说法,这个理论仍在“演变”中。洞穴和教堂画作中描绘的UFO也有其他解释。发现印度中部洞穴图像的J.R. Bhagat承认他的理论需要进一步检验,但他没有资源去做。
当Bogat请来专家时,他们驳斥了他的理论。历史学家表示,这些洞穴画并不是外星人,而是人类。尽管它们缺乏关键特征,但这在该地区的艺术中是典型的。它们还用黄色和红色墨水绘制,而这种墨水在1万年前并不存在。这使得这些画作可能只有1000年的历史。
几位科学家和地质历史学家得出了以下结论。这只是简单的岩石艺术,和外星人无关。科索沃的《基督钉十字架》画作中的UFO则代表着完全不同的东西。历史学家和专家表示,橙色和银色的漂浮舱实际上描绘的是太阳和月亮。
艺术家可能想展示天体如何对基督的钉十字架作出反应。因此,舱内的人并不是穿越到过去的外星人,而只是具有人格化的天体。
至于特兰西瓦尼亚的罗马尼亚画作,其中的UFO也有合理的解释。它并不象征来自未来的外星人,而是先知以利亚。在《圣经》旧约中,以利亚被火车接升天。因此,天空中的那个圆顶物体并不是飞船。
而那些火焰也不仅仅是普通的教堂火灾。它应该是以利亚的火车,帮助他升天,执行上帝的秘密使命。我在频道上也有关于这一点的视频。不幸的是,今天我们讨论的所有故事都不是真的。但它们确实展示了时间旅行的概念如何多年吸引人类的想象力。
我们为什么对时间旅行如此着迷?我认为这是因为时间是我们生活中为每个人平等的少数几件事情之一,而没有人能够控制。无论你积累多少财富或权力,最终时间都会胜利。时间旅行让我们思考未来的可能性,思考在我们离开后可能存在的事物。时间旅行也提醒我们过去的不可能性,关于做出的决定、错误和遗憾。
你生活中有多少事情会想回去改变?也许你不会在课堂上说那句愚蠢的话,或者你会在邻里对那个恶霸站出来,或者对公交车上的那个书呆子更友好。也许你会冒险尝试那个商业想法,学习一门外语,环游世界。但我们可以对自己玩一个把戏,重新掌控一点时间。这是我在面临困难决定时尝试做的事情。
10年后或20年后,你的未来自我会回想起今天的时刻,你会感到遗憾。你的未来自我会说,我愿意付出一切回去做出不同的选择。好吧,你现在就在这里。现在是你的机会。