Time Camera
Genrik Silanov, a retired geologist from Voronezh, claims to have created a time camera capable of capturing images from the past. His collection of 80 photographs, including images of Peter the Great and soldiers from 1943, has attracted media attention, including the newspaper Pravda. Silanov describes how his camera captures ultraviolet radiation, invisible to the human eye, allowing him to recreate historical scenes. He soon plans to publish a book on the subject and travel to Israel to document sites associated with the time of Jesus.
Genrik Silanov, a retired geologist from Voronezh, claims to have invented a time camera. As proof, he presents 80 photographs depicting historical scenes from the past. The case was reported by "Pravda" and many other Russian newspapers. The inventor announced the publication of a book with rich illustrations.
The most famous time camera is considered to have been created by Father Alfredo Pellegrino Ernetti, an Italian Benedictine monk who died in 1994. Work on this device was supposedly conducted in strict secrecy between 1950 and 1990, with the participation of physicist Enrico Fermi and V2 rocket engineer and designer Werner von Braun. The chronovision device is said to have recreated scenes from the life of Benito Mussolini and the Stations of the Cross of Jesus. Father Professor Francois Brune believes that the disassembled time camera remains in the Vatican archives to this day.
For Silanov, it all started with a photograph he took in a museum, where he was drawn to a painting depicting the throne of the Russian Tsars. When he developed the photograph, he discovered that Peter the Great was sitting on the seat! On another occasion, while photographing a soda bottle, he captured an image of the refrigerator from which it had been removed. His collection includes a photograph of soldiers from 1943, ancient warriors reminiscent of the Scythians, and an image of a mammoth with huge tusks against a background of giant trees.
"Everything that happens around us is constantly being recorded," explains Genrik Silanov. "It works similarly to film. When 'today' fades into the past, it's possible to recover a 'photograph of the past.' This happens when a camera captures ultraviolet radiation, invisible to the human eye. I constructed just such a camera."
The detailed construction of the time camera remains a Russian secret; all that is known is that it has lenses made of pure quartz. Silanov records images from the past on standard photographic film and uses the services of a regular studio to develop the images. Currently, the researcher is working on finding a method that would allow for the desired time period in the process of reconstructing the past. He also plans a trip to Israel to photograph holy sites dating back to the time of Jesus. Will his mission be successful? A comprehensive publication on this topic will soon be published in the monthly "Nieznany Świat."
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