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Can you actually freeze time?

Can you actually freeze time?

Yes. Time freezes whenever a stopwatch is stopped. Or a clock is stopped. Think of a sport in which the clock is stopped whenever there is a time-out.

How do you unfreeze time in real life?

7 Ways to Stop Time

  1. Clear out your physical (and mental) space.
  2. Play with daydreaming.
  3. Stretch your body.
  4. Spend time with the stars.
  5. Have supportive rituals.
  6. Rethink waiting.
  7. Find space between the notes.

What if I can stop time?

Our planet would stop spinning. Every molecule would just stand still. You wouldn’t even know that time had stopped, because your neurons wouldn’t be moving either. That is because stopping time would stop photons – the particles of light normally moving at the speed of, well, light.

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Is it possible to be frozen and then unfrozen again?

We see it all the time in movies. A person gets frozen or put in “cryosleep” and then unfrozen at a later date with no aging taking place, or other ill effects. Sometimes this happens on purpose, like to someone with an incurable disease hoping a cure exists in the future, or sometimes by accident, like someone getting frozen in a glacier.

Can You cryogenically freeze someone who is dead?

It’s currently illegal to perform cryonic suspension on someone who is still alive. Those who wish to be cryogenically frozen must first be pronounced legally dead – which means their heart has stopped beating. Though, if they’re dead, how can they ever be revived?

How does antifreeze work?

Much like the antifreeze in an automobile. This glycerol based mixture protects your organ tissues by hindering the formation of ice crystals. This process is called “vitrification” and allows cells to live in a sort of suspended animation. After the vitrification, your body is cooled with dry ice until it reaches -202 Fahrenheit.

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What would happen to your body if your body was frozen?

They could, and while you’d certainly be frozen, most of the cells in your body would shatter and die. As water freezes, it expands. Since cells are made up of mostly water, freezing expands the “stuff” inside which destroys their cell walls and they die.