The mathematical formulas in the movie 'Interstellar' are supervised by theoretical physicist Kip Thorne.



The latest film 'Interstellar' directed by Christopher Nolan, who worked on 'The Dark Knight' and 'Inception', will be released on Saturday, November 22nd. In the work, the earth is in a food crisis, and the main characters Cooper and others set out for the other side of the universe as if there is a star to live in as a solution to it, but in order to convince the place to go to the other side of the universe, Professor Brand, who plays Michael Caine, wrote on the blackboard that the calculation of 'gravity in 4th and 5th dimensions' and the 'solution of the Einstein equation' were all considered rather than appropriate.

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https://interstellar.withgoogle.com/transmissions#/kipthorne/detail



This is revealed on Google's 'Interstellar' special site. It is very regrettable that there is only an English version, and it is a fulfilling content.

The contents of the blackboard are, for example, something like this. It is about 'Gravity in 4 & 5 Dimensions'.





It also includes professor notes such as 'I HOPE!' And 'NEGATIVE TENSION! DANGEROUS BUT NECESSARY!'.



'Issue to solve in my equation for S'




'Foundation for Solving my Equation's Issue'. First, define the 5-dimensional basic constants, coordinates, 5-dimensional basic fields, and 4-dimensional basic fields.




In the '5D fundamental equations' section, '

Einstein's equations ' and 'Evolution of Nongravitational fields' have appeared.



'Hold Wormhole open!', The professor seems to have found something.




In the center figure, the boundary between the inside of the black hole (upper left side) and our universe (lower right side) is the '

event horizon ( horizontal plane)'.



For the contents of the blackboard, go to 'Solving Einstein's equations in 5 dimensions'.




'Evolution Equations'



The final conclusion seems to be 'preventing brain collisions (as a result of the calculations so far), thereby also preventing the destruction of our universe.' There is a sentence with a question mark at the end, 'Does it match the observation (finding)?', And there is also a comment in red in the formula in the latter half, 'It is dangerous if this is not larger than 0'.



The content of this blackboard is the basis for Cooper's departure during the work, but it is not explained in detail. Since the blackboard is not always stationary in a large copy, it seems that only those who are not familiar with it can grasp it at the level of 'It seems that something difficult is written', but in the content of such a part It is made with particular attention.

The details are so detailed because the theoretical physicist Kip Thorne, who is the executive producer, worked hard to create a 'cinematic adventure' based on a solid scientific foundation. Thorn also checks the scenes in the film to see if they can withstand scientific scrutiny, and writes

The Science of Interstellar as a scientific guidebook for the film.



By the way, during the 1997 movie 'Contact', Mr. Thorn was consulted by Carl Sagan, who wrote the script, about how to increase the credibility of fast-than-light movement, and presented a wormhole that can be passed. This leads to 'Kip Thorne's time machine'. Including the above contents, 'contact' is described in detail at the following site.

Contact: Manuke Station: SF Review
http://manuke.seesaa.net/article/62616207.html

in Science,   Movie, Posted by logc_nt