New model 'permits time travel'

Whitestar

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 23, 2004
Messages
362
I discovered this article on a new theory of time travel that avoids the paradoxes written by Julianna Kettlewell.

Here it is:

New model 'permits time travel'

By Julianna Kettlewell

If you went back in time and met your teenage parents, you could not split them up and prevent your birth - even if you wanted to, a new quantum model has stated.

Researchers speculate that time travel can occur within a kind of feedback loop where backwards movement is possible, but only in a way that is "complementary" to the present.

In other words, you can pop back in time and have a look around, but you cannot do anything that will alter the present you left behind.

The new model, which uses the laws of quantum mechanics, gets rid of the famous paradox surrounding time travel.

Paradox explained

Although the laws of physics seem to permit temporal gymnastics, the concept is laden with uncomfortable contradictions.

The main headache stems from the idea that if you went back in time you could, theoretically, do something to change the present; and that possibility messes up the whole theory of time travel.

Clearly, the present never is changed by mischievous time-travellers: people don't suddenly fade into the ether because a rerun of events has prevented their births - that much is obvious.

So either time travel is not possible, or something is actually acting to prevent any backward movement from changing the present.

For most of us, the former option might seem most likely, but Einstein's general theory of relativity leads some physicists to suspect the latter.

According to Einstein, space-time can curve back on itself, theoretically allowing travellers to double back and meet younger versions of themselves.

And now a team of physicists from the US and Austria says this situation can only be the case if there are physical constraints acting to protect the present from changes in the past.

Weird laws

The researchers say these constraints exist because of the weird laws of quantum mechanics even though, traditionally, they don't account for a backwards movement in time.

Quantum behaviour is governed by probabilities. Before something has actually been observed, there are a number of possibilities regarding its state. But once its state has been measured those possibilities shrink to one - uncertainty is eliminated.

So, if you know the present, you cannot change it. If, for example, you know your father is alive today, the laws of the quantum universe state that there is no possibility of him being killed in the past.

It is as if, in some strange way, the present takes account of all the possible routes back into the past and, because your father is certainly alive, none of the routes back can possibly lead to his death.

"Quantum mechanics distinguishes between something that might happen and something that did happen," Professor Dan Greenberger, of the City University of New York, US, told the BBC News website.

"If we don't know your father is alive right now - if there is only a 90% chance that he is alive right now, then there is a chance that you can go back and kill him.

"But if you know he is alive, there is no chance you can kill him."

In other words, even if you take a trip back in time with the specific intention of killing your father, so long as you know he is happily sitting in his chair when you leave him in the present, you can be sure that something will prevent you from murdering him in the past. It is as if it has already happened.

"You go back to kill your father, but you'd arrive after he'd left the room, you wouldn't find him, or you'd change your mind," said Professor Greenberger.

"You wouldn't be able to kill him because the very fact that he is alive today is going to conspire against you so that you'll never end up taking that path leads you to killing him."

Greenberger and colleague Karl Svozil introduce their quantum mechanical model of time travel on the ArXiv e-print service.


And here is the link:

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | New model 'permits time travel'

Personally, I've always found the idea of time traveling back into the past to be absurd because it defies common sense. Still, if time travel into the past is possible, I like the idea of avoiding paradoxes because that way, we won't have to worry about erasing ourselves out of existence.
 
I still remain dubious about this, though less on the possibility (at least theoretically -- whether or not we'll ever achieve it technologically is another thing) than on whether or not they've actually gone far enough. If we do make drastic changes (perhaps not the "grandfather paradox", etc., but close)... wouldn't our memories change to fit the alterations... after all, the time inbetween would now be different, and therefore the influences on our memories would reflect the changes we'd made, wouldn't they? Only someone or something existing outside time would know the difference... something along the lines of Leiber's Big Time, in fact....

It's a fascinating concept, but I doubt I'll live to see the answer in practical terms. But... one never knows; the fact that they're actually doing experiments with time travel and alternate dimensions is something that, even a few years ago, would have been so far-fetched that it would have been laughed off the screen. It opens up some very interesting possibilities, doesn't it?...
 
That's pretty much how time travel in The Time Travellers Wife worked - Of course, who knows if such a thing is ever going to be actually possible, but it sure make for some nice theories and imaginative tales.
 

Similar threads


Back
Top