Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

How to Build a Time Machine - It wouldn't be easy, but it might be possible
Scientific American ^ | September 2002 issue | By Paul Davies

Posted on 08/27/2002 1:06:06 PM PDT by vannrox


Image: PETER BOLLINGER

WORMHOLE GENERATOR/TOWING MACHINE is imagined by futurist artist Peter Bollinger. This painting depicts a gigantic space-based particle accelerator that is capable of creating, enlarging and moving wormholes for use as time machines.

September 2002 issue


How to Build a Time Machine

It wouldn't be easy, but it might be possible

By Paul Davies

OVERVIEW

Traveling forward in time is easy enough. If you move close to the speed of light or sit in a strong gravitational field, you experience time more slowly than other people do--another way of saying that you travel into their future.



Traveling into the past is rather

trickier. Relativity theory allows it in certain spacetime configurations: a rotating universe, a rotating cylinder and, most famously, a wormhole--a tunnel through space and time.

August 13, 2002

How to Build a Time Machine

It wouldn't be easy, but it might be possible

By

Paul Davies

Time travel has been a popular science-fiction theme since H. G. Wells wrote his celebrated novel The Time Machine in 1895. But can it really be done? Is it possible to build a machine that would transport a human being into the past or future?

For decades, time travel lay beyond the fringe of respectable science. In recent years, however, the topic has become something of a cottage industry among theoretical physicists. The motivation has been partly recreational--time travel is fun to think about. But this research has a serious side, too. Understanding the relation between cause and effect is a key part of attempts to construct a unified theory of physics. If unrestricted time travel were possible, even in principle, the nature of such a unified theory could be drastically affected.

Our best understanding of time comes from Einstein's theories of relativity. Prior to these theories, time was widely regarded as absolute and universal, the same for everyone no matter what their physical circumstances were. In his special theory of relativity, Einstein proposed that the measured interval between two events depends on how the observer is moving. Crucially, two observers who move differently will experience different durations between the same two events.

The effect is often described using the "twin paradox." Suppose that Sally and Sam are twins. Sally boards a rocket ship and travels at high speed to a nearby star, turns around and flies back to Earth, while Sam stays at home. For Sally the duration of the journey might be, say, one year, but when she returns and steps out of the spaceship, she finds that 10 years have elapsed on Earth. Her brother is now nine years older than she is. Sally and Sam are no longer the same age, despite the fact that they were born on the same day. This example illustrates a limited type of time travel. In effect, Sally has leaped nine years into Earth's future.

Jet Lag

The effect, known as time dilation, occurs whenever two observers move relative to each other. In daily life we don't notice weird time warps, because the effect becomes dramatic only when the motion occurs at close to the speed of light. Even at aircraft speeds, the time dilation in a typical journey amounts to just a few nanoseconds--hardly an adventure of Wellsian proportions. Nevertheless, atomic clocks are accurate enough to record the shift and confirm that time really is stretched by motion. So travel into the future is a proved fact, even if it has so far been in rather unexciting amounts.

To observe really dramatic time warps, one has to look beyond the realm of ordinary experience. Subatomic particles can be propelled at nearly the speed of light in large accelerator machines. Some of these particles, such as muons, have a built-in clock because they decay with a definite half-life; in accordance with Einstein's theory, fast-moving muons inside accelerators are observed to decay in slow motion. Some cosmic rays also experience spectacular time warps. These particles move so close to the speed of light that, from their point of view, they cross the galaxy in minutes, even though in Earth's frame of reference they seem to take tens of thousands of years. If time dilation did not occur, those particles would never make it here.

Speed is one way to jump ahead in time. Gravity is another. In his general theory of relativity, Einstein predicted that gravity slows time. Clocks run a bit faster in the attic than in the basement, which is closer to the center of Earth and therefore deeper down in a gravitational field. Similarly, clocks run faster in space than on the ground. Once again the effect is minuscule, but it has been directly measured using accurate clocks. Indeed, these time-warping effects have to be taken into account in the Global Positioning System. If they weren't, sailors, taxi drivers and cruise missiles could find themselves many kilometers off course.

To read more articles like this, subscribe to Scientific American -- TODAY!

At the surface of a neutron star, gravity is so strong that time is slowed by about 30 percent relative to Earth time. Viewed from such a star, events here would resemble a fast-forwarded video. A black hole represents the ultimate time warp; at the surface of the hole, time stands still relative to Earth. This means that if you fell into a black hole from nearby, in the brief interval it took you to reach the surface, all of eternity would pass by in the wider universe. The region within the black hole is therefore beyond the end of time, as far as the outside universe is concerned. If an astronaut could zoom very close to a black hole and return unscathed--admittedly a fanciful, not to mention foolhardy, prospect--he could leap far into the future.

My Head Is Spinning

So far I have discussed travel forward in time. What about going backward? This is much more problematic. In 1948 Kurt Gödel of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J., produced a solution of Einstein's gravitational field equations that described a rotating universe. In this universe, an astronaut could travel through space so as to reach his own past. This comes about because of the way gravity affects light. The rotation of the universe would drag light (and thus the causal relations between objects) around with it, enabling a material object to travel in a closed loop in space that is also a closed loop in time, without at any stage exceeding the speed of light in the immediate neighborhood of the particle. Gödel's solution was shrugged aside as a mathematical curiosity--after all, observations show no sign that the universe as a whole is spinning. His result served nonetheless to demonstrate that going back in time was not forbidden by the theory of relativity. Indeed, Einstein confessed that he was troubled by the thought that his theory might permit travel into the past under some circumstances.

Other scenarios have been found to permit travel into the past. For example, in 1974 Frank J. Tipler of Tulane University calculated that a massive, infinitely long cylinder spinning on its axis at near the speed of light could let astronauts visit their own past, again by dragging light around the cylinder into a loop. In 1991 J. Richard Gott of Princeton University predicted that cosmic strings--structures that cosmologists think were created in the early stages of the big bang--could produce similar results. But in the mid-1980s the most realistic scenario for a time machine emerged, based on the concept of a wormhole.

In science fiction, wormholes are sometimes called stargates; they offer a shortcut between two widely separated points in space. Jump through a hypothetical wormhole, and you might come out moments later on the other side of the galaxy. Wormholes naturally fit into the general theory of relativity, whereby gravity warps not only time but also space. The theory allows the analogue of alternative road and tunnel routes connecting two points in space. Mathematicians refer to such a space as multiply connected. Just as a tunnel passing under a hill can be shorter than the surface street, a wormhole may be shorter than the usual route through ordinary space.



The wormhole was used as a fictional device by Carl Sagan in his 1985 novel Contact. Prompted by Sagan, Kip S. Thorne and his co-workers at the California Institute of Technology set out to find whether wormholes were consistent with known physics. Their starting point was that a wormhole would resemble a black hole in being an object with fearsome gravity. But unlike a black hole, which offers a one-way journey to nowhere, a wormhole would have an exit as well as an entrance.

In the Loop

For the wormhole to be traversable, it must contain what Thorne termed exotic matter. In effect, this is something that will generate antigravity to combat the natural tendency of a massive system to implode into a black hole under its intense weight. Antigravity, or gravitational repulsion, can be generated by negative energy or pressure. Negative-energy states are known to exist in certain quantum systems, which suggests that Thorne's exotic matter is not ruled out by the laws of physics, although it is unclear whether enough antigravitating stuff can be assembled to stabilize a wormhole [see "Negative Energy, Wormholes and Warp Drive," by Lawrence H. Ford and Thomas A. Roman; Scientific American, January 2000].

Soon Thorne and his colleagues realized that if a stable wormhole could be created, then it could readily be turned into a time machine. An astronaut who passed through one might come out not only somewhere else in the universe but somewhen else, too--in either the future or the past.


The wormhole was used as a fictional device by Carl Sagan in his novel Contact.

To adapt the wormhole for time travel, one of its mouths could be towed to a neutron star and placed close to its surface. The gravity of the star would slow time near that wormhole mouth, so that a time difference between the ends of the wormhole would gradually accumulate. If both mouths were then parked at a convenient place in space, this time difference would remain frozen in.

Suppose the difference were 10 years. An astronaut passing through the wormhole in one direction would jump 10 years into the future, whereas an astronaut passing in the other direction would jump 10 years into the past. By returning to his starting point at high speed across ordinary space, the second astronaut might get back home before he left. In other words, a closed loop in space could become a loop in time as well. The one restriction is that the astronaut could not return to a time before the wormhole was first built.

A formidable problem that stands in the way of making a wormhole time machine is the creation of the wormhole in the first place. Possibly space is threaded with such structures naturally--relics of the big bang. If so, a supercivilization might commandeer one. Alternatively, wormholes might naturally come into existence on tiny scales, the so-called Planck length, about 20 factors of 10 as small as an atomic nucleus. In principle, such a minute wormhole could be stabilized by a pulse of energy and then somehow inflated to usable dimensions.

Censored!
Assuming that the engineering problems could be overcome, the production of a time machine could open up a Pandora's box of causal paradoxes. Consider, for example, the time traveler who visits the past and murders his mother when she was a young girl. How do we make sense of this? If the girl dies, she cannot become the time traveler's mother. But if the time traveler was never born, he could not go back and murder his mother.

Paradoxes of this kind arise when the time traveler tries to change the past, which is obviously impossible. But that does not prevent someone from being a part of the past. Suppose the time traveler goes back and rescues a young girl from murder, and this girl grows up to become his mother. The causal loop is now self-consistent and no longer paradoxical. Causal consistency might impose restrictions on what a time traveler is able to do, but it does not rule out time travel per se.

Even if time travel isn't strictly paradoxical, it is certainly weird. Consider the time traveler who leaps ahead a year and reads about a new mathematical theorem in a future edition of Scientific American. He notes the details, returns to his own time and teaches the theorem to a student, who then writes it up for Scientific American. The article is, of course, the very one that the time traveler read. The question then arises: Where did the information about the theorem come from? Not from the time traveler, because he read it, but not from the student either, who learned it from the time traveler. The information seemingly came into existence from nowhere, reasonlessly.


It is conceivable that the next generation of particle accelerators will be able to create subatomic wormholes.

The bizarre consequences of time travel have led some scientists to reject the notion outright. Stephen W. Hawking of the University of Cambridge has proposed a "chronology protection conjecture," which would outlaw causal loops. Because the theory of relativity is known to permit causal loops, chronology protection would require some other factor to intercede to prevent travel into the past. What might this factor be? One suggestion is that quantum processes will come to the rescue. The existence of a time machine would allow particles to loop into their own past. Calculations hint that the ensuing disturbance would become self-reinforcing, creating a runaway surge of energy that would wreck the wormhole.

Chronology protection is still just a conjecture, so time travel remains a possibility. A final resolution of the matter may have to await the successful union of quantum mechanics and gravitation, perhaps through a theory such as string theory or its extension, so-called M-theory. It is even conceivable that the next generation of particle accelerators will be able to create subatomic wormholes that survive long enough for nearby particles to execute fleeting causal loops. This would be a far cry from Wells's vision of a time machine, but it would forever change our picture of physical reality.

© 1996-2002 Scientific American, Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.


TOPICS: Science
KEYWORDS:
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-55 next last
To: vannrox
Outstanding article!
21 posted on 08/27/2002 1:26:46 PM PDT by Joe Hadenuf
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: beckett
"No participating in D-day or Pickett's Charge... In short, no fun at all."

Don't get me wrong, I honor the men who did both. I just don't think it was a real hoot for them.
22 posted on 08/27/2002 1:29:24 PM PDT by abishai
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
Time travel is not time dependent. Once it is developed in any time period, it can be made available to any other time pariod in history. Thus, time travel exists "now".
23 posted on 08/27/2002 1:31:07 PM PDT by Consort
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: RightWhale
Heck, I time travel every single night.

I lie down and close my eyes and like magic, it's hours later. I have no recollection of this, but my wife says I'm unconscious and making funny noises.

It sounds funny, but what if our brains are simply filtering through all possible events and manufacturing causality for us as a survival mechanism?

Each person's 'causal reality' that their brains create are very nearly similar simply by virtue of the fact that we are human and conscious.

The reason no one can grasp 'time' and all this 'chronological protection' nonsense come up, I think, is because it doesn't exist outside of our own heads.

24 posted on 08/27/2002 1:31:49 PM PDT by Cogadh na Sith
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: stlrocket
OK, that was spit all over myself funny.
25 posted on 08/27/2002 1:32:13 PM PDT by Freemyland
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
So...I take it that I shouldn't have thrown my old one out last week?
26 posted on 08/27/2002 1:32:37 PM PDT by PoorMuttly
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: beckett
We are seeing stars as they were years and years ago (even our own Sun only shows us what it looked like eight minutes ago). So, all we need to do is invent faster-than-light travel, book it on out to some spot X light-years from Earth, and invent a super-high-powered telescope to observe events on Earth as they occurred X years ago! Want to witness Hiroshima? Just go about 57 light-years away and point your telescope at Japan!

This idea has always seemed more plausible to me than actually travelling back in time. Of course, considering that we don't even have the technology to view the flag we planted on the moon, from telescopes on Earth, this is pretty far-fetched too. Not to mention cloud cover on Earth obscuring events in the past, and forget about anything important that happened at night.

It occurred to me that visiting the past will never happen on Earth, because if it were possible, we probably would have been visited by someone from the future by now. Maybe. Damn, this stuff gives me a headache!

27 posted on 08/27/2002 1:33:19 PM PDT by TrappedInLiberalHell
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
That made my head hurt. I'm gonna go watch Bill Nye the Science Guy now....that's more on my level of scientific understanding.
28 posted on 08/27/2002 1:33:43 PM PDT by ward_of_the_state
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
ANd when one is invented, Algore will use it to go back in time and really invent the internet.
29 posted on 08/27/2002 1:33:54 PM PDT by Freemyland
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: PoorMuttly
Hmmmm...LAST week...

I have a plan. It involves instant coffee.
30 posted on 08/27/2002 1:34:49 PM PDT by PoorMuttly
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: TheBigB
But if Kirk sold them and McCoy bought them, who made them?

I believe they were 18th century American "very rare" (in the 20th century)... made long before Kirk pawned them. McCoy bought or aquired them in what the 24th century? So they had 300 years to travel to whereever McCoy got them.

31 posted on 08/27/2002 1:35:22 PM PDT by AFreeBird
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
The article forgets that there's more to physics than relativistic theory - Quantum.

In quantum, all things exist simultaneously, the only way we differentiate our lives (as well as linear time) is that our point of observation along our quantum path moves in a linear fashion. In quantum, the ability to travel in time only requires that you move your obsrvation point rather than the entire universe.

32 posted on 08/27/2002 1:35:26 PM PDT by 11B3
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: 11B3
Yeah, see my post #24 above...

You're not too stupid for an 11 bang-bang--are ya...

33 posted on 08/27/2002 1:37:37 PM PDT by Cogadh na Sith
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 32 | View Replies]

To: vannrox; RadioAstronomer; Doctor Stochastic; Physicist
If time travel into the past is theoretically possible, and if it will ever be done in the future, then that means that people that are here now may be from the future. We are currently in their past, so they could be coming back to change things here.

Since we don't see people now who are from the future, then we can assume that we won't ever be able to travel in time.

34 posted on 08/27/2002 1:39:36 PM PDT by Come get it
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
Marty McFly helps out his friend Doc Brown, and ends up being taken back in time by Doc's time-machine. Marty, a boy of the 80's, has to come to grips with being in the 50's and get his parents to fall in love to set straight the damage his presence has done to the events of the past.

35 posted on 08/27/2002 1:42:11 PM PDT by SGCOS
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
Didn't I read this article already tomorrow?
36 posted on 08/27/2002 1:43:17 PM PDT by asformeandformyhouse
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: asformeandformyhouse
Didn't I read this article already tomorrow?

Yes, you did. And you will. Call it 'deja view'.

37 posted on 08/27/2002 1:44:46 PM PDT by TrappedInLiberalHell
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 36 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
Bump. "How can you be in two places at once, when you're not anywhere at all?"-sung.
38 posted on 08/27/2002 1:45:05 PM PDT by techcor
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: techcor
Bump. "How can you be in two places at once, when you're not anywhere at all?"-sung.

The same way Bill Clinton can talk out of both sides of his mouth and say nothing at all.

39 posted on 08/27/2002 1:46:36 PM PDT by TrappedInLiberalHell
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 38 | View Replies]

To: beckett
Crucially, no theory supports the possibility of traveling into the deep past, only into a past where an already constructed wormhole awaits.

All we have to do is find and stabilize a naturally occurring wormhole that exists in the deep past. Simple!

40 posted on 08/27/2002 1:48:18 PM PDT by Sir Gawain
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-55 next last

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.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson