Question:
Is it possible to time travel?
glasgow rocks
2006-09-14 15:04:22 UTC
Is it possible to time travel?
34 answers:
wrkey
2006-09-14 15:17:41 UTC
That depends on how you view time travel. It has already been done in since. A few years back two very fast jets were both given very accurate clocks that had been syncronized in time. Both planes then took off, one head east and one heading west. The planes traveled at top speed and then stopped back at the original starting point. When the clocks on both planes were compared, the time was different. One plane's time had actually slowed down when compared to the others.



Take a space ship that flys at close to the speed of light... leave the earth and travel out for 5 years and then return at the same speed for 5 years. Occupants on earth will have 'aged' about 10 years more than the occupants on the space ship.



If you call this time travel.. then theoretically it's possible.



This is all based on Einstiens theory of relativity where he postulates that each thing in our universe has it's own personal time. Time is 'relative' the person or thing. Time can also be warped by large object such as stars and planets.



Now.. can one travel back in time... or ahead in time? Well.. that would be quite difficult. Let's say you had a time machine built in your garage. It's designed to pop back in time (in an instant) to 100 years ago. You hit the button and poof! you are in outer space and instantly dead because 100 years ago earth was millions of miles from where it currently is.. not because of it's orbit around the sun but because the whole solar system is blasting through space at a million miles a minute. This is because the universe is expanding and taking earth along with it. Thus.. this makes it a bit difficult to pop from one point in time to another and retain the same spot on earth.



Hope this helps!
nemesis
2006-09-16 00:09:01 UTC
As you approach the speed of light (c), time slows down - which means that an hour on board your ship could equal many years outside. The effect is intensified the closer you reach c. In theory, if you were able to travel at the speed of light, then time would stop.



Travelling backwards through time is likely to be possible - maybe using wormholes or something like that. The mechanics of a time machine probably mean you can only travel back to when the time machine was first activated - this would explain the famous argument "why haven't we been visited by time travellers?" assuming we haven't.
LORD Z
2006-09-14 15:25:51 UTC
No.



We are not physically capable of travelling through time without dying along the way and neither is anything we could construct.



The funny thing about light speed is that tends to burn up physical matter. The speed of sound nearly shakes you unconcious and that is not even close to the speed you would have to go at to time travel.



Of course you could look into the Einsteinian believe that you can see the past or the future with the proper device. The problem is that is not actual time travel.



It may not even be possible for your conciousness to travel through time. That is a speed that is not certain but it could be argued that it is fast enough to make the journey but without a body. The problem is you will need a body eventually and odds are you can't share one.
jjc1138
2006-09-14 15:18:00 UTC
Your traveling in time right now.



Einstein believed it was impossible because matter that reaches the speed of light converts to energy. This does not explain how when the universe was created it expanded at a rate faster than light which theoretically may have been what created time in the first place.
prometheus81
2006-09-14 15:09:08 UTC
It sounds nice, but it would be impossible to change what has already happened since time truely is a series of changes not a clock, and since the future hasn't happened yet how could you go there. The only way to time travel would be altering time isolated to the individual traveling so that time moves slower for them in their space and time moves faster outside. Then you would be in the future faster.
helen g
2006-09-15 02:18:01 UTC
Theoretically yes, but only forwards. You can travel forwards in time because time slows down when you approach the speed of light. Thus, if you were to go on a day trip to the extremities of the galaxy at 0.99c, when you came back all your friends would be really old.
CaptKert
2006-09-14 15:09:05 UTC
Sure every time you travel it takes some amount of time. So therefore you are time traveling.



The opposite of traveling back in time may be a different topic due to traveling faster than the speed of light
Stephen
2006-09-14 15:18:55 UTC
Yes, the laws of physics allows for Time Travel in theory.

However the practical implications are beyond our current

scientific technology.
anonymous
2006-09-14 15:18:12 UTC
yes... here is the way ..



1 / buy 6 cans of Special Brew lager

2/ one Curry and rice

3/ ask the wife to "Go out and have a good time"

4 / Drink and eat 1&2 above in one hour.

5/ Enjoy the ride...

sorted..
joe l
2006-09-14 15:19:17 UTC
No! Time can't be moved or stored. You can make the earth spin faster but that won't make people age quicker or change things.It is not like cd player where you can select your track
anonymous
2006-09-14 15:07:52 UTC
According to Einstein, the faster you travel at the speed of light...oh hell, I don't know, it works in the movies.
sur2124
2006-09-14 15:07:30 UTC
In theory, if you go faster than the speed of light you can tavel back in time, but i dont know about forward in time. Right now, lets try and reach speed of light first.
jan venigoor of east kilbride
2006-09-14 15:18:02 UTC
time is in the eye of the beholder ,

if you are late time speeds up and runs away from you,

if you are waiting time drags by and feels like an eternal struggle,

so we all travel in time,

in our own time.
adriantheace
2006-09-14 18:23:46 UTC
no it isn't, if you did manage to achieve a speed faster than light (and you would have to be one hell of a runner!) then you would only be able to make a journey in next to no time. And you may appear to be in two places at once.
Malcolm
2006-09-18 02:49:20 UTC
I suppose so if you could travel faster than light
bruinfan
2006-09-14 15:07:52 UTC
Perhaps possible but likely hopelessly impractical because of the prodigious amount of energy it would likely take.
tinkerbell
2006-09-14 15:11:03 UTC
yeah but we dont know how...remember they took to clocks and left one in new york flew one around the world in concorde and one was a ten of a second slower...they are working on it...
tkalnins2000
2006-09-14 15:09:19 UTC
I would say no, but found out next tuesday its possible.
Amanda
2006-09-14 15:13:30 UTC
I don't think so, but then again I still have a lot to learn!! Maybe, I think that would be pretty cool.
Seriously Though
2006-09-14 15:40:05 UTC
Yes I visited my future grand-daughter in 50 years from now.



NO!!!!!!!
anonymous
2006-09-14 15:09:05 UTC
If it were you nor I would never know or could. Too much damage could be done , with such knowledge
frivolouscrimesquad
2006-09-14 15:08:52 UTC
this is the 2nd time i`ve answered this question just that you aint recieved the first one this year
Mr E.
2006-09-14 15:25:05 UTC
Ye Gods! NO!!!!



Live in the real world.
mistickle17
2006-09-14 15:10:58 UTC
Only if youv'e just woken from a coma!
scott j
2006-09-18 03:14:21 UTC
Well Dr Who does so it must be
manda_ecosse
2006-09-14 15:17:33 UTC
in the future definately xx
keatze
2006-09-18 12:09:34 UTC
i believe so, and if it is possible, it has allready happened in the future.
anonymous
2006-09-14 15:09:07 UTC
Everything is possible.



See you in the future?
Cary Grant
2006-09-14 15:11:31 UTC
Yes, of course it is.
anonymous
2006-09-14 15:06:46 UTC
ever seen doctor who?
anonymous
2006-09-14 15:06:32 UTC
YES , DOCTOR WHO DID IT FOR YEAR'S
Veritas
2006-09-14 15:13:42 UTC
Only when your dead.
anonymous
2006-09-14 15:06:57 UTC
only God can do that!!
babygirl4us
2006-09-14 15:48:57 UTC
In one of the wildest developments in serious science for decades, researchers from California to Moscow have recently been investigating the possibility of time travel. They are not, as yet, building TARDIS lookalikes in their laboratories; but they have realised that according to the equations of Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity (the best theory of time and space we have), there is nothing in the laws of physics to prevent time travel. It may be extremely difficult to put into practice; but it is not impossible.



It sounds like science fiction, but it is taken so seriously by relativists that some of them have proposed that there must be a law of nature to prevent time travel and thereby prevent paradoxes arising, even though nobody has any idea how such a law would operate. The classic paradox, of course, occurs when a person travels back in time and does something to prevent their own birth -- killing their granny as a baby, in the more gruesome example, or simply making sure their parents never get together, as in Back to the Future. It goes against commonsense, say the sceptics, so there must be a law against it. This is more or less the same argument that was used to prove that space travel is impossible.



So what do Einstein's equations tell us, if pushed to the limit? As you might expect, the possibility of time travel involves those most extreme objects, black holes. And since Einstein's theory is a theory of space and time, it should be no surprise that black holes offer, in principle, a way to travel through space, as well as through time. A simple black hole won't do, though. If such a black hole formed out of a lump of non-rotating material, it would simply sit in space, swallowing up anything that came near it. At the heart of such a black hole there is a point known as a singularity, where space and time cease to exist, and matter is crushed to infinite density. Thirty years ago, Roger Penrose (now of Oxford University) proved that anything which falls into such a black hole must be drawn into the singularity by its gravitational pull, and also crushed out of existence.



But, also in the 1960s, the New Zealand mathematician Roy Kerr found that things are different if the black hole is rotating. A singularity still forms, but in the form of a ring, like the mint with a hole. In principle, it would be possible to dive into such a black hole and through the ring, to emerge in another place and another time. This "Kerr solution" was the first mathematical example of a time machine, but at the time nobody took it seriously. At the time, hardly anybody took the idea of black holes seriously, and interest in the Kerr solution only really developed in the 1970s, after astronmers discovered what seem to be real black holes, both in our own Milky Way Galaxy and in the hearts of other galaxies.



This led to a rash of popular publications claiming, to the annoyance of many relativists, that time travel might be possible. In the 1980s, though, Kip Thorne, of CalTech (one of the world's leading experts in the general theory of relativity), and his colleagues set out to prove once and for all that such nonsense wasn't really allowed by Einstein's equations. They studied the situation from all sides, but were forced to the unwelcome conclusion that there really was nothing in the equations to prevent time travel, provided (and it is a big proviso) you have the technology to manipulate black holes. As well as the Kerr solution, there are other kinds of black hole time machine allowed, including setups graphically described as "wormholes", in which a black hole at one place and time is connected to a black hole in another place and time (or the same place at a different time) through a "throat". Thorne has described some of these possibilities in a recent book, Black Holes and Time Warps (Picador), which is packed with information but far from being an easy read. Now, Michio Kaku, a professor of physics in New York, has come up with a more accessible variation on the theme with his book Hyperspace (Oxford UP), which (unlike Thorne's book) at least includes some discussion of the contribution of researchers such as Robert Heinlein to the study of time travel. The Big Bang, string theory, black holes and baby universes all get a mention here; but it is the chapter on how to build a time machine that makes the most fascinating reading.



"Most scientists, who have not seriously studied Einstein's equations," says Kaku, "dismiss time travel as poppycock". And he then goes on to spell out why the few scientists who have seriously studied Einstein's equations are less dismissive. Our favourite page is the one filled by a diagram which shows the strange family tree of an individual who manages to be both his/her own father and his/her own mother, based on the Heinlein story "All you zombies --". And Kaku's description of a time machine is something fans of Dr Who and H.G. Wells would be happy with:



[It] consists of two chambers, each containing two parallel metal plates. The intense electric fields created between each pair of plates (larger than anything possible with today's technology) rips the fabric of space-time, creating a hole in space that links the two chambers.



Taking advantage of Einstein's special theory of relativity, which says that time runs slow for a moving object, one of the chambers is then taken on a long, fast journey and brought back: Time would pass at different rates at the two ends of the wormhole, [and] anyone falling into one end of the wormhole would be instantly hurled into the past or the future [as they emerge from the other end].



And all this, it is worth spelling out, has been published by serious scientists in respectable journals such as Physical Review Letters (you don't believe us? check out volume 61, page 1446). Although, as you may have noticed, the technology required is awesome, involving taking what amounts to a black hole on a trip through space at a sizeable fraction of the speed of light. We never said it was going to be easy! So how do you get around the paradoxes? The scientists have an answer to that, too. It's obvious, when you think about it; all you have to do is add in a judicious contribution from quantum theory to the time travelling allowed by relativity theory. As long as you are an expert in both theories, you can find a way to avoid the paradoxes.



It works like this. According to one interpretation of quantum physics (there are several interpretations, and nobody knows which one, if any, is "right"), every time a quantum object, such as an electron, is faced with a choice, the world divides to allow it to take every possibility on offer. In the simplest example, the electron may be faced with a wall containing two holes, so that it must go through one hole or the other. The Universe splits so that in one version of reality -- one set of relative dimensions -- it goes through the hole on the left, while in the other it goes through the hole on the right. Pushed to its limits, this interpretation says that the Universe is split into infinitely many copies of itself, variations on a basic theme, in which all possible outcomes of all possible "experiments" must happen somewhere in the "multiverse". So there is, for example, a Universe in which the Labour Party has been in power for 15 years, and is now under threat from a resurgent Tory Party led by vibrant young John Major.



How does this resolve the paradoxes? Like this. Suppose someone did go back in time to murder their granny when she was a little girl. On this multiverse picture, they have slid back to a bifurcation point in history. After killing granny, they move forward in time, but up a different branch of the multiverse. In this branch of reality, they were never born; but there is no paradox, because in he universe next door granny is alive and well, so the murderer is born, and goes back in time to commit the foul deed!



Once again, it sounds like science fiction, and once again science fiction writers have indeed been here before. But this idea of parallel universes and alternative histories as a solution to the time travel paradoxes is also now being taken seriously by some (admittedly, not many) researchers, including David Deutsch, in Oxford. Their research deals with both time, and relative dimensions in space. You could make a nice acronym for that -- TARDIS, perhaps?


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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