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.
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.
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.
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 LagThe 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.
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.
THE NOTORIOUS MOTHER PARADOX (left) and RESOLUTION OF THE PARADOX (right) Click here for interactive demonstration
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