Technology
The Oracle meets world-famous neuroparticle surgeon and Supra Brain inventor Professor Prisha Deshmukh at the New Delhi Centre for Computational Particle Neuroscience.
The Supra Brain, built in collaboration with the Mumbai Institute of Particle Physics and the Indian Space Agency, is a hardware upgrade that expands brain capacity to levels that will furnish humans with the scientific nous and physical ability to successfully colonize the terrestrial exoplanet YMCA-bG. The exoplanet is one of the so-called ‘sanctuary planets’ selected by the One World Government as safe havens, should ongoing attempts to arrest climate change fall short.
Professor Deshmukh speaks with us after hearing the news that the Supra Brain has been approved for mass implantation.
Professor Deshmukh, a small unassuming woman in her late forties, has been at the frontier of the neuroparticle spatial project since its inception in 2120. After more than a decade of research and development, she is ready to lead a team of neuroscientists who will implant more than 10,000 new Supra Brains into volunteers selected from a worldwide pool of applicants.
The trial means Deshmukh is well ahead of the Brazil-based Brain² program, while similar North American and Old European efforts are trailing decades behind due to lack of skills and funds. “It’s been an exhilarating process driven by the pressing need to find new inhabitable space for the world’s population,” says Deshmukh, “current climate control efforts may not be able to offset the effects of the 4 - 5 more degrees of warming expected in the next 43 years, in which case humanity will need to relocate to other planets in outer space - and do so quickly - to avoid extinction.”
Deshmukh explains that the implantation process entails two distinct steps. First, an infinitesimal cellular nano computer (the Supra Brain) is implanted into the neocortex of the volunteers. Second, each volunteer is injected with N5514YL, the substance that will supercharge receivers in the Supra Brain, causing a reaction that will activate the more than 100 billion neurons in the host brain, exponentially expanding their capacity to transmit electrical impulses through the nervous system.
“The volunteers have gone through a carefully-designed competitive selection system and I have personally supervised the process together with High Commander for the Indian Space Agency, Ved Chatuvedi,” says Deshmukh, “Each candidate has the minimum rank of astronaut or pilot commander. All have been trained to withstand the three-and-a-half year space journey to YMCA-bG. They are charged with the crucial task of setting up a new colony and paving the way for others to follow over the next three decades. We need the finest minds of our generation.”
N5514YL will not only exponentially increase the volunteers’ computational intelligence, such as their capacity to interpret data, it will also increase their ability to understand and make complex decisions with minimum delay.
Most importantly, in a matter of weeks after the injection, N5514YL will cause the brain to send impulses to the pulsar alveoli cells in the volunteers’ lungs, transforming the way oxygen from the air is absorbed into their bloodstream. This catalyzed organic evolution (COE) will enable the volunteers to withstand and survive any atmosphere currently known to man. “We fully expect YMCA-bG to have an atmosphere similar to earth’s, but we need to ensure that the astronauts can survive on any planet they may have to visit on their way to YMCA,” says Deshmukh with confidence.
The YMCA-bG Voyager that will carry the pioneering astronauts will travel a little faster than the speed of light. The spacecraft will be equipped with the raw material to build more than 20,000 construction, medical and agricultural robots and the raw materials to build the first human outpost from which all subsequent colony developments will be managed.
In extrapolated contingency plans for human survival, the Global Space Programme is working hard to send at least ten further large-scale crews to YMCA-bG in the coming decade. “We are ready and will shortly have the capacity for millions of further Supra Brain implants,” says Deshmukh.
Professor Deshmukh will present the results of the first volunteer study this summer at the Inter Global Space Conference in Delhi.