Technologies



Fluction Science

The "Fluction Knot" of the Spatio-Temporal Fabric
The Fluction knot as it appears in the IoF emblem
(also known as Fluxion, Fluctionation, Fluxionation)


Discovered in 1830-1832 initially by Balduin 
Oxenhardt, later developed in collaboration with Michael Faraday, Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage at the Institute of Fluction. Initial work was carried out at the IoF's research laboratory at the Dover Castle Tunnel Complex. 

The complexities of Fluction Science are still not fully understood, and can only be grasped by a very few scientists versed in the most advanced mathematics, but it is known that the "knot" which represents the heart of the theory is symbolic of the "entanglement space" which exists in dimensions as yet unknown within the Spatio-Temporal Fabric.

Van Oxenhardt and Faraday's research led to the first Fluction Entanglement and Projection Apparatus, which controls and powers the Fluction Entanglement Process, as well as The Device, a kind of vehicle which can be used in conjunction with the Apparatus to send freight and passengers.
The Apparatus, 1834






The effect of the Fluction Entanglement and subsequent Fluction Projection is to instantly and safely transport and object or living thing to any other location, as long as the destination is in direct line of sight.

See also

Retrocausality, Fluxuation Bath, Entanglement distillation, Entanglement-assisted teletransportation, The Apparatus, the Device.


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