Posted on 12/13/2018 2:07:09 PM PST by ETL
The concept of time travel has always captured the imagination of physicists and laypersons alike. But is it really possible? Of course it is. We're doing it right now, aren't we? We are all traveling into the future one second at a time.
But that was not what you were thinking. Can we travel much further into the future? Absolutely. If we could travel close to the speed of light, or in the proximity of a black hole, time would slow down enabling us to travel arbitrarily far into the future. The really interesting question is whether we can travel back into the past.
I am a physics professor at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, and first heard about the notion of time travel when I was 7, from a 1980 episode of Carl Sagan's classic TV series, "Cosmos." I decided right then that someday, I was going to pursue a deep study of the theory that underlies such creative and remarkable ideas: Einstein's relativity. Twenty years later, I emerged with a Ph.D. in the field and have been an active researcher in the theory ever since.
Now, one of my doctoral students has just published a paper in the journal Classical and Quantum Gravity that describes how to build a time machine using a very simple construction.
Closed time-like curves
Einstein's general theory of relativity allows for the possibility of warping time to such a high degree that it actually folds upon itself, resulting in a time loop. Imagine you're traveling along this loop; that means that at some point, you'd end up at a moment in the past and begin experiencing the same moments since, all over again a bit like deja vu, except you wouldn't realize it. Such constructs are often referred to as "closed time-like curves" or CTCs in the research literature, and popularly referred to as "time machines." Time machines are a byproduct of effective faster-than-light travel schemes and understanding them can improve our understanding of how the universe works.
Here we see a time loop. Green shows the short way through wormhole. Red shows the long way through normal space. Since the travel time on the green path could be very small compared to the red, a wormhole can allow for the possibility of time travel. Credit: Panzi, CC BY-SAOver the past few decades well-known physicists like Kip Thorne and Stephen Hawking produced seminal work on models related to time machines.
The general conclusion that has emerged from previous research, including Thorne's and Hawking's, is that nature forbids time loops. This is perhaps best explained in Hawking's "Chronology Protection Conjecture," which essentially says that nature doesn't allow for changes to its past history, thus sparing us from the paradoxes that can emerge if time travel were possible.
Perhaps the most well-known amongst these paradoxes that emerge due to time travel into the past is the so-called "grandfather paradox" in which a traveler goes back into the past and murders his own grandfather. This alters the course of history in a way that a contradiction emerges: The traveler was never born and therefore cannot exist. There have been many movie and novel plots based on the paradoxes that result from time travel perhaps some of the most popular ones being the "Back to the Future" movies and "Groundhog Day."
Exotic matter
Depending on the details, different physical phenomena may intervene to prevent closed time-like curves from developing in physical systems. The most common is the requirement for a particular type of "exotic" matter that must be present in order for a time loop to exist. Loosely speaking, exotic matter is matter that has negative mass. The problem is negative mass is not known to exist in nature.
Caroline Mallary, a doctoral student at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth has published a new model for a time machine in the journal Classical & Quantum Gravity. This new model does not require any negative mass exotic material and offers a very simple design.
Mallary's model consists of two super long cars built of material that is not exotic, and have positive mass parked in parallel. One car moves forward rapidly, leaving the other parked. Mallary was able to show that in such a setup, a time loop can be found in the space between the cars.
So can you build this in your backyard?
If you suspect there is a catch, you are correct. Mallary's model requires that the center of each car has infinite density. That means they contain objects called singularities with an infinite density, temperature and pressure. Moreover, unlike singularities that are present in the interior of black holes, which makes them totally inaccessible from the outside, the singularities in Mallary's model are completely bare and observable, and therefore have true physical effects.
Physicists don't expect such peculiar objects to exist in nature either. So, unfortunately a time machine is not going to be available anytime soon. However, this work shows that physicists may have to refine their ideas about why closed time-like curves are forbidden.
Explore further: Stephen Hawking's final book suggests time travel may one day be possible here's what to make of it
In other words, someone in a spacecraft traveling at a high rate of speed will actually have aged less than someone who remained behind on earth (stationary). This is assuming the traveler returns to earth. ie, returns to the same stationary reference frame as he started out. -ETL
Infinite mass, eh? Piece of cake (no, actually, the whole cake, extra large).
If ifs and buts was candy and nuts, every day would be Christmas.
On this topic, I always thought that if time travel were possible we would know about it already because it wouldn't matter when it was invented. < g!>
Just don’t sit next to Michael Moore or you might be doomed to Groundhog day.
Time travel is easy. I travel forward in time every day.
A time loop?
A time loop?
A time loop?
A time loop?
You live in one time zone, but travel to another for work?
That made my brain hurt.
This isn’t science. This is L. Ron Hubbard stuff.
Now youre caught in my time loop.
Got any cards?
I thought you just needed a flux capacitor hooked up to your delorean, and to get it up to 88 mph?
I think physicists carry things to an irrational extrapolation sometimes. They think that if change happens between A and B at a certain rate, then the same rate of change happens between B and Z, when that doesn’t necessarily follow.
but only if you have an object with infinite mass
Did once upon a time, got a divorce.
I’d like to travel to 2020 and return with a copy of the Wall Street Journal.
There have been times when I’ve been at a mass that went on so long it seemed infinite.
I grew up watching Doctor Who (Tom Baker and Jon Pertwee) and that certainly gave an introduction to time travel. However, I also recall the episode of “Galactica 1980” where the two protagonists (Troy and Dillon) went back to the 1940s to stop a rogue agent (connected to the Cylons, of course) from giving the Nazis the secret to the atomic bomb. I remember the neat effects they showed about traveling at the speed of light.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.