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In a sense, time travel into the future is possible utilizing time dilation. Time travel into the past is far less certain. As we understand it, it would require unconfirmed phenomena such as faster-than-light travel or wormholes.
Is time travel possible?
Quote from: OPIs time travel possible?Yes, of course it's possible! I do it all the time.At present, I am traveling into the future at 1 second per second.If I had a tame black hole, or a fusion rocket, I could travel into the future a bit slower.- If it were possible for me to get out of the local galaxy cluster, I could travel into the future slightly faster (relative to someone on Earth)The challenge is to travel anything but 1 second per second into the future!
The trouble with the idea of time travel to the past is, there is nothing to go back to. We invented time as a way of measuring change. You could argue that time dilation shows time is real. However, that is only a slowing down of physical processes. The slowing down of the change of states.
Time is still a mathematical dimension.
Yes we know atomic clocks are variously affected by relative velocity and gravitational fields strength
All clocks are affected by these things. Atomic clocks are in no way special in this way. Paint peels slower relative to a frame in which it moves faster.The coordinate rate of clocks can indeed be negative given a non-inertial coordinate system. Ask Mike Fontenot who seems to lose untold sleep about such things, and who has coincidentally posted for the first time in a while just a while ago.
Hi allHalc can I please just clarify your points in regards to;Quote from: HalcAll clocks are affected by these things. Atomic clocks are in no way special in this way. Paint peels slower relative to a frame in which it moves faster.In regards to your first point does direction of relative away/towards have any bearing
All clocks are affected by these things. Atomic clocks are in no way special in this way. Paint peels slower relative to a frame in which it moves faster.
Quote from: HalcThe coordinate rate of clocks can indeed be negative given a non-inertial coordinate system.are you stating rate of atomic clocks as negative as going in reverse or just slowing down ?.Because if negative = reverse
The coordinate rate of clocks can indeed be negative given a non-inertial coordinate system.
are we not setting the scenario of the paint analogy going from peeling/flaking into the wind to. returning to the painted surface becoming shiny and new then liquid in the brush/sprayer to been back in the paint tin ?
Say you had a rival in business. You send an assassin back in time to kill your rivals grandfather. Now the rival is never born so you don't have the reason to send the assassin in the first place.You have invented Schrödinger's grandfather. Alive and dead at the same time.