Time Traveling through a wormhole could be possible but it's not if Wormholes exist, it maters that where the wormhole ends to and what time period. Let say if we had a rocket and it took 50 earth years to get their at 99.9999999% of the speed of light, once we enter it, we could be chucked through any time period in the past or future. Worm Holes ain't like computers, they wont take you to an exact time period.
The concept of wormholes is a theoretical topological feature of spacetime. It's possible construct is caused by two black holes or a black hole and a white hole. The wormhole itself is not a physical entity, just a name for the corridor between the two and thus cannot have any gravity.
The mitochondria is the organelle responsible for providing energy to the cell through the process of cellular respiration, which produces ATP (adenosine triphosphate) molecules.
The mitochondria is responsible for providing a cell with its energy by oxidizing food molecules through a process called cellular respiration. This organelle generates ATP, the energy currency of the cell, through the breakdown of glucose and other nutrients in the presence of oxygen.
mitochondrion - an organelle containing enzymes responsible for producing energy
Chloroplasts convert sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide into glucose through photosynthesis, providing energy to plants. Mitochondria then convert glucose into ATP through cellular respiration, releasing stored energy for use by all organisms. Together, these organelles enable the flow of energy through the food chain.
No you cannot go through an incoming wormhole. In the Stargate series a wormhole is a one way ride.The one way nature of the Stargates helps to defend the gate from unwanted incursions. Stargates are also only capable of sustaining and artificial wormhole for 38 minutes. It's possible to keep it active for a longer period, but it would take immense amounts of energy.
Theoretically, a wormhole would be so unstable that it would collapse if anything, even a single atom or photon, passed through it. However, some theories suggest that adding energy to a wormhole could stabilize it to a point where matter could pass through.
No, E=mc^2 is not an equation specifically for a wormhole. It is Einstein's famous equation that relates energy (E) to mass (m) and the speed of light (c). Wormholes are theoretical passages through spacetime that might be possible according to the equations of general relativity.
Wormholes are, at best, theoretical. It is thought however, that our sun does not have sufficient mass or energy to create a wormhole.
It has been hypothesised that it could be possible, but would require large amounts of "exotic energy" to do so.The problem is that any "wormhole", should one be created, is so unstable, that it would collapse as soon as a change in mass was detected.
The concept of wormholes is a theoretical topological feature of spacetime. It's possible construct is caused by two black holes or a black hole and a white hole. The wormhole itself is not a physical entity, just a name for the corridor between the two and thus cannot have any gravity.
Building a wormhole is currently beyond human technology and understanding. Theoretical physics suggests that constructing a wormhole would require a large amount of negative energy or exotic matter, which has not been observed or harnessed. The concept of traversable wormholes remains mostly speculative.
Since there is no definitive proof of their existence and thus there is no way to experimentally confirm or disband our theoretical formulae and calculations nobody knows. If you are to believe the original theory behind the wormhole, the concept of the Einstein-Rosen Bridge, come up with by Albert Einstein, then a wormhole is very, very, very, very, very tiny and exists for such a short period of time that nothing is ever really going to get through it. Beyond Einsteins idea, modern theoretical physicists believe there is a great number of things a wormhole could be capable of. It is thought that if you could make an artificial wormhole by expanding one (with ridiculous amounts of hyper-concentrated planck energy), propping it open (possibly with some form of exotic matter) and (according to Stephen Hawking) absorbing the massive radiation "feedback" that such a warping of spacetime creates the a wormhole could theoretically: 1. Transport matter, electromagnetic radiation and energy vast distances, technically, faster than the speed of light without actually passing the speed of light. 2. Travel through time (related to point 1 as a wormhole is a passage through SPACETIME, not just space). 3. Travel to parallel Universes! In every case above it is heavily debated whether or not a wormhole (if one could be created) could be used to get to a particular place, time or universe or combination of these three. It is entirely possible, indeed likely, that a wormhole would just dump its passengers at a completely random point in timespace! If this is true it would really be a rather poor form of travel.
The mitochondria is the organelle responsible for providing energy to the cell through the process of cellular respiration, which produces ATP (adenosine triphosphate) molecules.
In order to keep a Wormhole stable you need something called ''Exotic Matter''. Exotic matter is not the same as antimatter. It consists of particles that have negative energy or mass. Negative energy makes sense in the context of quantum theory, because the energy density of the quantum vacuum is actually positive (instead of zero). A region of "negative" energy density is actually a region with a positive energy density below that of the quantum vacuum. It is possible to create such regions using photons trapped between parallel plates (the Casimir effect). It is also possible to create such a region using particles of a so-called scalar field, such as the Higgs boson being searched for with the Large Hadron Collider. I got this from a recent book on wormhole physics (The Physics of Stargates -- Parallel Universes, Time Travel, and the Enigma of Wormhole Physics, by Enrico Rodrigo, 2010)
Mitochondria are responsible for providing a cell with energy by oxidizing food through a process called cellular respiration. They produce ATP, the energy currency of the cell, through the breakdown of glucose and other nutrients.
that hasn't been proved yet. The wormhole does warp space time, imagine a piece of paper the fastest way from one side to the other is straight across but if you manipulate the paper by folding it in half and poking a small hole in it you have just shortened your trip to a fraction of what it was. Couple of problems: 1) Power it will take an enormous amount of energy to open a wormhole 2) a wormhole is gravitationaly unstable and will collapse if any matter or light attempt to pass through it. 3) If your math is not right and you open a wormhole you may not come out where you wanted to (such as in a star or in deep space never being able to find your way back)