Sliders Technical
Manual
Sliders Technical Manual
(c) Copyright 1996 This document may be freely distributed by private
individuals or nonprofit organizations, but may not be sold or
altered in any way without written permission from the author.
SLIDERS TECHNICAL MANUAL (FAQ) by Nigel G. Mitchell
(zikzak23@aol.com) * Last Updated June 5, 1996
FOREWORD
The purpose of the Sliders Technical Manual is to provide fans with
an understanding of the workings of the show, both technical and
physical. It was created because I have yet to see anyone explain
parallel worlds in layman's terms to Sliders fans, nor have I seen a
mechanical explanation for how the sliding machine works. The
following excerpts answer questions that many Sliders fans have asked
before. I've tried to simplify the theories and mathematics as best I
could, and have taken guesses as to how the machine works, based on
how it would have to work, and on evidence from the show. Some topics
that were too complex or unnecessary for a basic understanding of the
ideas expressed have been expanded on in the glossary at the end of
this file. Anyone who finds errors in this text is encouraged to
email me with corrections at zikzak23@aol.com
NOTE: The content of this text varies from the HTML version.
**indicates the term is expanded on in the glossary
*TABLE OF CONTENTS*
I. Parallel Universes
What is sliding?
What is a parallel universe?
Where are parallel universes?
What is the Einstein-Rosen-Podolsky Bridge?
II. The Sliding Machine
What is it?
How does it work?
What is the timer?
Why can't the Sliders go home?
What's A Window Of Opportunity? (also known as "Why don't they
just slide whenever they get into trouble?")
I. PARALLEL UNIVERSES
WHAT IS SLIDING?
"Sliding" is the name given to the act of crossing from one parallel
universe to another by Quinn Mallory.
WHAT IS A PARALLEL UNIVERSE?
A parallel universe is another universe that is a duplicate of our
own. It contains stars and solar systems and galaxies. Some have
planets that are an exact copy of our own. On them, people exist that
are just like us, literally in some cases. There are an infinite
number of parallel worlds. Everyone has copies of themselves on at
least some of them.
Every time a decision is made, parallel universes are created. For
instance, you're driving along, and decide to turn a corner. In one
universe, you go left. In the other, you go right. These small and
major changes can alter the universe in many ways. Because of this
fact and the number of parallel universes, almost any world you can
imagine might exist in a parallel universe. A world where America is
a communist nation. A world where women are in control instead of
men. A world where the dinosaurs never died. These are the worlds of
"Sliders."
WHERE ARE PARALLEL UNIVERSES?
There are many theories. One imagines that our universe is like a
soap bubble drifting through open air. It's surrounded by other soap
bubbles, each containing another complete universe. These universes
never come in contact, so there's no way to detect or even see them.
These universes are parallel universes.
Another theory says that parallel universes are literally right on
top of us, overlapping ours, existing in another dimension, one which
we can't see. There might be billions of yous occupying the same
space you are right now.
WHAT IS THE EINSTEIN-ROSEN-PODOLSKY BRIDGE?
The Einstein-Rosen-Podolsky Bridge (more commonly known as the
Einstein-Rosen Bridge) is a tunnel connecting two universes. It was
developed by physicists Albert Einstein and Nathan Rosen. They came
up with the idea that if an object had strong enough **gravity, it
could warp space, creating a tear that would link parallel universes.
The only known object in the universe with that kind of force is a
**black hole. Anyone who could enter the black hole would find an
opening or **"wormhole" that would take them to another universe.
That's the Einstein-Rosen Bridge.
The problem with the Bridge is that the same force that warps space
would crush anyone who tried to enter the black hole. Until recently,
it was believed that no one could do it. But in 1963, mathematician
**Roy Kerr came up with a way that someone could approach the black
hole, avoiding the force, to enter the wormhole. On "Sliders," Quinn
Mallory succeeded in the final step, creating a Bridge that allows
people and objects to safely enter a wormhole to cross into another
universe.
II. THE SLIDING MACHINE
WHAT IS IT?
The sliding machine (no other name has yet been given) was created by
Quinn Mallory in an attempt to generate **antigravity. But the
machine is capable of generating an Einstein-Rosen-Podolsky Bridge, a
gateway connecting one dimension from another. People and objects can
pass through this gateway from one parallel dimension to the
next.
HOW DOES IT WORK?
The sliding machine creates an electrical field, concentrated on two
points; the location of the Slider and the corresponding point in a
parallel universe. This field is so strong that it literally rips a
hole in the fabric of space, connecting the two universes by a
tunnel, called a **"wormhole." The sliding machine then lines the
wormhole with **exotic matter, a form of matter that can support the
incredible pressure it's under. In this way, the wormhole is shaped
into a tunnel that people or objects can pass through. Once the
journey is complete, the sliding machine removes the exotic matter,
shuts off the electrical field, and the Bridge collapses.
Travel into the new dimension does not change their relative position
in time or space. If they slide at three o'clock Monday morning near
a tree in Golden Gate Park, they will appear in their new dimension
at the same relative place and time on the new world.
WHAT IS THE TIMER?
The sliding machine is remotely-controlled by a handheld device
called a "timer." The timer can activate the machine, set the power
level, and even choose where the wormhole will form. It also has an
LCD display that counts down how long it will be before the next
window of opportunity will form.
An Einstein-Rosen-Podolsky Bridge is opened by pushing a button on
the timer's face that sets the machine to open a wormhole to a new
dimension. The user of the timer can choose where the gateway appears
by aiming it at a location. However, he cannot choose where the
gateway forms in their new dimension.
WHY CAN'T THE SLIDERS GO HOME?
In the beginning, the sliding machine opened a Bridge that allowed
people to cross into another dimension. The machine could be
programmed for a certain length of time. When the time ran out, the
wormhole would reform, pull the passengers into it, and return them
to their world. The timer was preset to return them to their original
universe.
That's the way it used to work. But in the pilot episode, Quinn
opened a Bridge before the given time ran out. Somehow, this burned
out the preset controls of the timer. The guidance system was
destroyed, leaving them no direct way home. The Sliders have to jump
from universe to universe at random, hoping the next one will be
their Earth Prime.
WHAT'S A "WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY?"
Travel between dimensions is only possible at a single window of
opportunity on each Earth visited when the Sliders can open a Bridge
to another world. The reason for this has never been clearly stated
on the show. One theory is that the sliding machine was weakened by
the accident, and can only open a gateway to an adjacent universe.
It's like they have to wait for another universe to get close enough
to theirs to cross over to it. The window is different on each Earth
- mere minutes on some, several months on others. The timer has been
rebuilt as a countdown device, telling them how long they have until
the next window. If the Sliders fail to activate and use the gate at
the appointed time, they'll be stuck in their new universe for
another 29.7 years before another wormhole opens up.
*GLOSSARY*
ANTIGRAVITY - Antigravity is a theoretical force that is the reverse
of gravity. Instead of causing things to draw towards the center of
the Earth, antigravity would cause things to move away from it.
Applying this force to an object would cause it to hover or even fly
away into space. It would have many practical applications if
discovered (see the Disney movie 'The Absent-Minded Professor' for
further details), but physicists consider it an impossibility. A
magnetic field is capable of suspending a metal object in the air,
and this might have been what Quinn was working on when he discovered
the Einstein-Rosen-Podolsky Bridge.
BLACK HOLE - A star's energy comes from a series of nuclear
explosions on its surface. These explosions are caused by the star's
gravity, which compresses the hydrogen in its core. Eventually, a
sun's nuclear fuel will be used up, and without the explosions to
support it, the gravity will crush the star. If the star is big
enough, it will compress into an incredibly small point. But since it
has the same mass as a full-sized star in a smaller package, its
gravity is enormous. Not even light could escape its grip, which
makes it black, hence the name "black hole." In scientific circles,
the black hole is now known as a "singularity."
EXOTIC MATTER - Opening a wormhole in the fabric of space is one
thing. Keeping it open is another. When physicists Michael Morris and
Kip Thorne developed a model of a working wormhole, they calculated
that the tension needed to hold it open would be incredible. For a
wormhole with an opening four miles across, you'd need force equal to
10 to the 33 power per square inch. And to keep the inside of the
tunnel from collapsing, you'd need a million times a trillion pounds
per square inch. From what we know, nothing in the universe can hold
up to that kind of pressure.
Notice the keywords "what we know." It's possible that something this
strong does exist, but we just haven't found it yet. So we can talk
about it, hoping that one day we'll find it. We call this imaginary
substance 'exotic matter.' We've never seen exotic matter and have no
evidence that it exists. But physicist Stephen Hawking posed the
theory that exotic matter exists around the 'event horizon' of a
decaying black hole. It could also exist inside atoms themselves,
which could be released with atom smashers. But so far, it remains
only a theory.
GRAVITY - Gravity is the force that draws everyone and everything
towards the center of very large objects like planets and suns. The
larger the planet or sun, the stronger the pull of gravity.
HYPERSPACE - Hyperspace is the term used to describe dimensions that
exist beyond the three (and possibly four) dimensions that we know
of. A simplified description is that it's like another side of our
universe where our physical rules don't apply.
ROY KERR'S SOLUTION - Einstein and Rosen had concluded that the
**wormhole they had developed was meaningless, since no one could
survive the trip into a black hole. At a certain point, called the
'event horizon,' any spaceship getting close enough to the black hole
would be caught by the grip of its gravity. The gravity would so
strong that the ship couldn't escape it. As the ship was drawn closer
to the black hole, the gravity would increase to the point where the
ship would be crushed like an egg. Needless to say, this would mean
instant and unpleasant death for anyone inside. It seemed as if black
hole travel was the stuff of science-fiction.
But in 1963, Roy Kerr shocked the scientific world with a solution to
this problem. He posed the theory that black holes spin on an axis.
It made sense, since most stars rotate and would keep this rotation
even when collapsed. This changed everything, because you would get a
second event horizon which you could enter safely. Like the eye of a
hurricane, this event horizon would be free of the gravitational
forces that crushed the above travellers. If a ship could enter this
horizon, it could travel into the singularity and into another
universe.
WORMHOLE - the term "wormhole" is used to describe tunnels that
connect distant points in space and time. However, the term is a
misnomer. It really has nothing to do with worms. It's derived from
the analogy of the universe as an apple.
Imagine worms living on the surface of an apple. The only way they
can reach the other side of the apple is by crawling along the
surface. This takes a long time, and the worms assume that's the only
way to move around on their apple. But one day, one of the worms eats
a tunnel through the center of the apple (as worms will do). If it
starts on one side of the apple and eats its way through to the other
side, it would make a tunnel through the apple. Any worm that wanted
to reach the other side of the apple could now enter the tunnel at
one end and crawl through to the other side. Things are much easier
for the worms.
Now back to the abstract. Imagine that space and everything we see
and know about it is the surface of a very large apple. We're like
those worms who can only move on the surface of the apple. We assume
that's the only way to get from place to place on it. But
**hyperspace is like the inside of our apple. If we made a tunnel
through hyperspace connecting two points in our universe, we're
effectively doing what the hungry worm did. We're making a tunnel
that allows us to leave our known universe and go someplace else. The
analogy is where we get the term "wormhole."
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The information for this manual came from the following sources:
"Hyperspace: A Scientific Odyssey Through Parallel Universes, Time
Warps, and the 10th Dimension" written by Michio Kaku. Published by
Anchor Books.
"Parallel Universes: The Search For Other Worlds" written by Fred
Alan Wolf. Published by Touchstone.
"Cosmic Wormholes: The Search For Interstellar Shortcuts" written by
Paul Halpern. Published by Penguin Books.
"Sliders: The Novel" written by Brad Linaweaver. Published by
Boulevard Books.
"Sliders," the TV show. Broadcast by Fox Television. Watch it!
