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Time Travel

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We've seen w/ both special and general relativity that time is not ... might happen with billiard balls in a modified version of the matricide paradox ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Time Travel


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  • Weve seen w/ both special and general relativity
    that time is not completely static
  • Given the right situation, time can be
    manipulated in different ways
  • The question is, does this include the
    possibility of time travel?

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  • As it turns out, time travel could be possible w/
    the right technology
  • Unfortunately for us, the right type of
    technology does not include Deloreans and flux
    capacitors

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  • Instead, we need a way to both create and
    manipulate wormholes

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  • If we can figure out a way to master wormholes,
    we might come up with two strategies for time
    travel
  • The first uses special relativity
  • The other uses general relativity
  • Both rely on the idea of time moving differently
    in different reference frames

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Strategy One Special Relativity
  • Remember the twin paradox?
  • Recall that the twins clocks move differently
    (hence one is older than the other when he/she
    gets back)

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  • So lets say I have a spaceship in my front yard
  • This ship is connected, via wormhole to my living
    room

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  • This wormhole exists in a higher dimension than
    the space the ship travels through
  • Lets also assume that as the space ship travels,
    it stays connected to the wormhole as the ship
    moves, the wormholes length never changes

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  • Before the ship leaves, I make sure that the
    clock inside and living room clock read the same
    time
  • After this check, the ship blasts off into space
    at 9AM (on January 1st, 2000)
  • According to the ships clock, it stays in flight
    for 6 hours (at a speed very close to light
    speed) then turns around and heads back to Earth
  • It arrives back on my front lawn at 9PM

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  • Sure enough, if I look through the wormhole and
    see my front lawn in the background
  • But if I turn around and look at my front lawn,
    the ship isnt there
  • Whats going on?

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  • From the twin paradox, we know that time travels
    differently inside the ship than it does for me
    in my living room
  • 9 hrs of near light speed travel corresponds to a
    much longer time for me
  • In fact, Id have to wait 10 years before I see
    the ship arrive back on my front lawn

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  • Once the ship arrives, I could go inside, look
    through the wormhole, and see a younger version
    of myself sitting in my living room (if I
    traveled through, I would be moving into the
    past)
  • Conversely, I could look through the wormhole in
    2000 and the see the world of 2010 (and again, I
    could travel through the hole into that world)
  • In fact, I might see an older version of myself
    peering through

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Strategy Two General Relativity
  • Once again, well rely on the use of wormholes
  • This time however, we slow time w/ gravity rather
    than speed

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The Setup
  • Imagine two regions of space one close by a
    neutron star or black hole(B), the other a
    distance R away (A)

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  • We know from GR that the clocks will move at
    different rates B will move slower than A b/c
    its in a higher gravitational field
  • If were not convinced, we could actually travel
    from clock A to B and observe the two different
    clock rates (assuming we take travel time into
    account)

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  • Heres where it gets interesting Place a
    wormhole between A and B such that a person
    looking through the wormhole at A will be able to
    see B
  • The wormhole is effectively reducing the distance
    R between the two clocks by creating a shortcut
    in higher dimensional space

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How Does This Relate to Time?
  • We know that if the distance between the two
    clocks is very small, theyre essentially ticking
    at the same rate
  • So a person looking through the wormhole will see
    clock A with the same time as clock B

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  • Lets imagine a new scenario a person is
    standing at B, decides he wants to check up on
    clock A, comes back, and travels through the
    wormhole to A
  • What will happen?

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  • By doing this, this person is looking or
    traveling into the past
  • In fact, depending on the setup (you pick an R
    big enough or wait around long enough), he could
    see a younger version of himself checking the
    time at clock A

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Limitations of Our Time Machine
  • The furthest you can travel back in time is the
    moment the ship blasts off, or the moment you
    place your wormhole near a neutron star
  • Both machines rely on the use of wormholes, which
    havent been confirmed or denied

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Two Views of Time
  • A line that can branch off, forming new lines
  • One continuous line with the occasional
    closed-loop

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Einsteins Views World Lines
  • A world line describes where you are and when
  • Even when you die, the world lines of individual
    atoms continue
  • According to Einstein, they can form loops but
    cannot be cut

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Paradoxes
  • The man w/ matricidal tendencies
  • Events with no beginning
  • The story of Jane

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The Man w/ No Past
  • One day, a struggling inventor gets a visit from
    a wealthy, older gentlemen from the future
  • The older man gives the young inventor two
    things knowledge of stock market booms, and the
    blueprints for a time machine

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  • Using this knowledge, the young inventor gets
    rich off of investments
  • In his spare time, he constructs a time machine
  • Decades later, he travels back in time to meet
    his former self, thereby completing the process

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  • The question is, where did the knowledge on time
    machine construction come from?

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Jane
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Billiard Balls
  • Unfortunately, its a bit tough to do
    calculations involving humans
  • However, we can calculate what might happen with
    billiard balls in a modified version of the
    matricide paradox

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  • Say you have two openings of a wormhole separated
    by a few feet
  • You want to fire a billiard ball into one end,
    such that it will come out the other end in the
    past
  • But what happens if the billiard ball comes into
    the past, hitting its younger self and preventing
    it from reaching the opening

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  • In all these paradoxes, certain things have to
    happen to ensure that world lines are not broken
  • Why?
  • What stops a person from killing their ancestors
    once in the past?

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  • The ability to act according to choice
    constitutes free will
  • If you cant act, something is restricting your
    free will
  • Some physicists have claimed the laws of physics
    do this during time travel

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