Time travel.

We've had a lof of conversation avout this in our physics class, so I will have to throw my 2 cents in:

There are two 'models' of possible time travel:
1. The 'Fixed universe' model (like in Harry Potter) means that any time travel caused events in our past have already happened and we can witness the changes the time travelers made. What speaks against this is the so called spectator paradox - If time travel was invented in the future, people would like to go to the past to witness the history changing events, such as the death of Christ. Supposedly, this never happened, at least in our universe.

2. The 'Alternate universe' model (like in Back to the future or Butterfly effect). Seems more likely than the other one.

seankane said:
so say that someone creates a method of time travel in 2042, well the earliest time people from 4409 will be able to send something back to is that exact moment in 2042.

Why? Explain.

AaronBransdon. said:
It is physically impossible to travel faster than the speed of light, as the speed of light seems to stay the same no matter what speed you are travelling.
If you are travelling at 99% the speed of light, outside your spaceship or whatever the speed of light is still 100% faster than you, meaning no matter how fast you go, its isn't possible.

Some people suggest throwing a tennis ball when you are at 99.99% the speed of light, but this is based on perspective, not velocity, so the tennis ball is really only going 40 miles and hour, while someone viewing it from outside a space-craft would view it as going 100.1% the speed of light.

True, even if you were traveling at the speed of light, any other light or ship traveling at the speed of light would be observed as traveling at the speed of light, regardless of its direction. Another thing is that Einstein claimed that it's impossible to ACCELERATE matter up to the speed of light (because you would need infinite energy to do that, as the mass of matter grows up to infinity upon approaching that speed). There is a possibility for a particle to travel at (photons) or beyond that speed, like the hypothetic Tachyon particles.

Another thing which is interesting when it comes to speed of light travel is the Warp drive from Star Trek, which was given some semi-scientific background. The idea is based on the concept that you could contract the space in front of the ship and expand the space behind it, so you could practically travel beyond the light speed without actually reaching it. Even though it's supposedly based on some physical fallacies, it's worth checking out if you're interested in that kind of stuff.

To get back to the topic, the only way I personally see both time and deep space travel possible is to use or create wormholes somehow, the spacetime is curved, so you can find a shortcut and go along it.
 

seankane

Member
Pete Pachota said:
seankane said:
so say that someone creates a method of time travel in 2042, well the earliest time people from 4409 will be able to send something back to is that exact moment in 2042.

Why? Explain.

sorry, i don't remember the theory behind it, i saw it a couple years ago, but the guy explaining it was one of the world's leading theoretical physicist's, so i believe it.

i'm not saying its definitely true since pretty much everything involved with time travel is just theory, but i know it sounded logical when i heard it, i just can't remember why. when i've got more time i'll find the show and rewatch it.
 

Madis

Super Geek
Staff member
Pete Pachota said:
seankane said:
so say that someone creates a method of time travel in 2042, well the earliest time people from 4409 will be able to send something back to is that exact moment in 2042.

Why? Explain.

...

Answer:
Madis said:
...

- if you travel to past, there has to be somekind of molecular structure that can form into you. You can not just appear out of clear air. We all know that we can teleport information through electrical signals but we also have two machines, one at each end of the travel which converts the signals into text, pictures and other files. To teleport ourselves we would need something that destroyes/copies the molecular structures of our body, transfer them by signal and a generator that builds it up at the end of the travel, for example on the other side of the planet. But teleporting a body into time that has already happened (past), is utopic.
 

Encarmine

Member
Well I just figured this out,
But surely to travel in time, first you must discover what "time" actually is?
I mean sure the clock goes tick tock but why, lol? What drives it? (and for those who say "Lolololol batteries drive clocks n00b", you fail.)
 
seankane said:
Encarmine said:
I heard something once that if you go past the speed of light time goes backwards?

it doesn't go backwards, its just that your sense of time is different from anything not moving that fast, like aaron said.


you guys need to watch nova more, best show.

time travel IS scientifically possible, forwards and backwards. the only thing is, once the first time travel device is created, that's the earliest someone from the future would be able to go back to.

so say that someone creates a method of time travel in 2042, well the earliest time people from 4409 will be able to send something back to is that exact moment in 2042.

now that's where your time paradox stuff comes in. the second that machine is turned on, won't there be an influx of things coming from the future? say the second you turn it on, you get a message from the future saying that the world is going to end in 2900? then will you be able to change the future since you know what's going to happen, or is it set?

someone really needs to get on making a time machine, the idea of it is so cool.
yeah i saw the one they made using lasers etc, sounds cool.

its a crazy thing to think on
 

team_punishment

dargersaurus rex
i see time travel to the past messing everything up. if you go to the past no matter what you do it will effect the future somehow. if by doing that resulted in you not building a time travel device or you not being born wouldnt you just disapear or something?
 

Chaseme37

Member
books to read on this:

einsteins dreams

and then some other one I can't remember haha

basically einsteins theory of time is that it is relative. like so:

a man is sitting on a train, facing north, staring at a clock and a mirror. the train is set to travel south. while the train is stopped at the station, he would see the clock ticking normally, and any movement he made would be immediately reflected by the mirror. the train then speeds up to half the speed of light. the clock would take 2 seconds for each second the hand moves, and any movement he made, it would take twice as long for his reflection to make them. why? because the light from the mirror and the clock is traveling towards his eyes, but he's traveling away from it (he's facing north and he's traveling south) so in essence, he has "slowed down" time. now, the train speeds up to the speed of light. the clock would stop ticking, and any movement he made would not be reflected by the mirror, the reflection would stay frozen. the light cannot catch up with his eyes, because he is traveling away from it at the exact same speed it is going. he has effectively stopped time. so to everyone else in the world, everything would be going normal, but this man would be frozen in time. that is why time is RELATIVE. oh and if the train abruptly stopped, the clock would instantly zoom to the current time, and all the movements he made would instantly play out in front of him faster than he could percieve, and everything would be back to normal. crazy huh?
 

briflip

Member
Nick Granger said:
N i c k Raley said:
what about slowing time to where u can walk around normal and everybody else is moving really slow ? is it possible
you could always run while everyone is walking.

that would make me tired ...but i got a better idea SCOOTER while everyone is slowed down in time
 
Chaseme37 said:
books to read on this:

einsteins dreams

and then some other one I can't remember haha

basically einsteins theory of time is that it is relative. like so:

a man is sitting on a train, facing north, staring at a clock and a mirror. the train is set to travel south. while the train is stopped at the station, he would see the clock ticking normally, and any movement he made would be immediately reflected by the mirror. the train then speeds up to half the speed of light. the clock would take 2 seconds for each second the hand moves, and any movement he made, it would take twice as long for his reflection to make them. why? because the light from the mirror and the clock is traveling towards his eyes, but he's traveling away from it (he's facing north and he's traveling south) so in essence, he has "slowed down" time. now, the train speeds up to the speed of light. the clock would stop ticking, and any movement he made would not be reflected by the mirror, the reflection would stay frozen. the light cannot catch up with his eyes, because he is traveling away from it at the exact same speed it is going. he has effectively stopped time. so to everyone else in the world, everything would be going normal, but this man would be frozen in time. that is why time is RELATIVE. oh and if the train abruptly stopped, the clock would instantly zoom to the current time, and all the movements he made would instantly play out in front of him faster than he could percieve, and everything would be back to normal. crazy huh?

No. A traveller going at the speed of light in a vessel would percept anything that's moving with him normally, e.g. the mirror, the clock. It's just that the time outside the vessel would run ABNORMALLY FAST. Your reasoning is based on old Newtonian physics + the idea that the speed of light is the maximum speed. The basic claim of the special relativity theory is that the speed of light is the same in any inertial system, regardless of it's motion, speed of the light source etc.
 

seankane

Member
Joe Micro said:
my head hurts

what pete's saying is that chad's theory is wrong is that since a the person and a clock are both in a train moving at half the speed of light, the clock isn't moving in relation to the person, so the whole taking the clock moving 1 tick in 2 seconds is wrong.
 

Chaseme37

Member
^^^^ k well, that's not my theory, it's einstein's, so if you don't like it, take it up with him haha. it still makes sense though because the light is still being reflected off the mirror and clock and everything and if he's traveling away from it than it can't catch him. that makes sense dude
 
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