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"Time Travel"
This is somthing I have been pondering for quite some time and I would like imput from a few high-level thinkers.
I know there are a couple impossibilities in this idea but please dont get hung up on them. When you see a star at night, the light you are seeing is not what is happening right now but what was happening (perhaps) millions of years ago based on the speed of light and the extreme distance betwine the Earth and most stars. So here is my theory. Assume (by some freak act of phisics) that we found a way to rocket a shuttle many times faster then the speed of light. If we shot this shuttle very far away from earth and passed light for a long period of time would we be able to eventualy stop and (with a very powerful telescope) look back at the earth as it was thousands or perhaps millions of years ago? Just like we on Earth can see the birth of a star that has most likely already died out in real time, could we look back on Earth and see such things as living dinosaurs, or the Battle of Thermopylae? Or possably see yourself playing outside as a child? I'd like to hear your ideas. |
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I have thought of this many a time. Theoretically it is very possible to see the past light emitted from the Earth, if you travel just ahead of the Speed of Light. As far as actual small-scale events including people and such, I imagine any images retrieved from the telescope would be blurred beyond recognition no matter its' power, due to the relatively dim atmosphere of Earth.
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Nima was a being from the future, many many years into the future, his stepmania skills were alright for his time, he would be considered a low-middle class player. Nima, getting sick of people ignoring his scores like 14 perfects on 0x1311, saved up his lunch money for several years until he could afford to build a rocket shuttle that moved so fast he could travel faster than light and eventually see back to our current time. Nima did just this, and using his state of the art wireless internet connection that could pick up a connection from anywhere in the universe, he played stepmania in the year 2003. Playing to only get bad scores to look new to the game, Nima wasted a little under 3 years gaining respect in the past stepmania community he had time traveled to. He eventually became the worlds best stepmania player, and could finally show his skills from the future from which he came. Nima made many videos to prove himself legit beforehand, he posted some scores, each better than the last, eventually, his bad 14 perfect score from the future he posted. People had already started to become suspicious by this point, and even more people had been convinced by this score. Nima, not knowing what to do because his camera had broken and he was stuck in space, he couldn't make a new video to prove his legitimacy. Instead of saying that because people would believe he was lying, Nima claimed his past videos are all the proof anyone needed, he had made no mistakes showing judge/.ini in those videos on good scores he claimed. Tsutter, unconvinced by Nima's excuse, continued to call bs upon Nima, as well as many, many more players. At this point, Nima had started to realize some of the differences of the future because of what he had done to the past. Nima knew what he had to do, lie to everyone, but give them what they wanted, and say that he wasn't legit. Nima did this, and saved the future from himself.
Nobody knows for sure what has become of Nima since these events, many believe he still floats around in his space shuttle, commenting on random youtube videos every now and then, other believe he returned back to his own time, and continued to play stepmania. |
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The school's old Earth Systems teacher explained this in class once.
It has always fasinated me. I would like to see the Big Bang more then anything. |
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i can see where you are coming from on this. of course its impossible, butthe theory is sorta probable. if only there could be such a high powered telescope to actually see so far. you would most likely be able to see into the past because the light that the earth gave away 10,000 years ago would be shown if you are 10,000 light years away.
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Also ponder this. If you were going faster than the speed of light and you looked out a rear window toward the earth that you are speeding away from would you be able to see anything at all while you were moving? Would it be complete darkness because no light is hitting you?
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I'm not sure what you're building a window out of that holds up in vacuum at a velocity faster than the speed of lgith, but there would be plenty of light on all sides of you, just not the same light that you'd see if you were stationary.
You won't be able to tell what you're looking at in the same way that just driving very fast at normal Earth speeds starts to create tunnel vision and blur what you can see around you. Also...the important thing you seem to be missing in the OP is that light is not the same thing as images. Moving away from the Earth extremely fast until you've "passed" the light that is a million years old is something you can do in theory, except what you're really doing is moving away from the -sun- extremely fast until you've passed the light that is a million years old, and so you'd be able to see, um...some light that is technically old. If you focused your super powerful, incredibly accurate telescope back at Earth and looked at it, you'd get -A clear image of Earth right now exactly as you left it- (Or potentially a few seconds after you left it depending I suppose on how long it took you to travel that far away. What you're suggesting is somewhat analogous to saying "If I follow a river really far down from the lake, and then look at the water, can I see the lake" Yes, it took the light emitted from say, some star far away, so long to get here that it may have already gone nova and we don't know because the light from the explosion hasn't reached us, but if you were to travel there at many times the speed of light, it would have still already gone nova, just as you approached it, you'd see the star's development accellerating because you were catching up to the light it was emitting right now. Going really fast doesn't actually turn time backwards for everyone but you, as much as some bad sci-fi would have you believe. The best you can do in terms of going faster than light is to use it to functionally time travel into the future. |
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Another discussion totally obliterated by Devonin's great mind.
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That's because we can only perceive information traveling slower than the speed of light.
~Tsugomaru |
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if we are speaking physics then the g force our bodies would exprience would crush are bodies, so yes we could not travel any where near the speed of light...
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I am a big fan of really really old movies. The some of them about space travel (before we actualy did it) talk of how the forces over 5 G's would kill a man in seconds. We know that man can survive (with injury sometimes) ejecting out of a jet aircraft. If I remember right I think that is a short burst of 200+ G's. If you can base your statement on fact I really would like to look at your sources. Quote:
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we are always looking into the past no matter what
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You can't make a rocket shuttle go 10000000000000000000000 per second.... Yeah, that's 10 with 21 zeros behind it, AKA the speed of light.
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You forgot the units. You can make any number seem big if they are measured in units as small or smaller than picometers.
You wouldn't die from the "g-force" unless you went from 0 to light speed within a matter of seconds. The g-force deals with acceleration and one g is 9.8 m/s^2. If you can steadily accelerate to the speed of light, then it shouldn't be a problem. Although you can't feel it, we're traveling through space at well over a hundred kilometers per second, but we don't experience any g's because we're not accelerating much. ~Tsugomaru |
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However, it would never happen, given they are impossibilities. We don't need to get hung up on breaking the speed of light - that's not the real problem (Sure, you can't break the speed of light across the shortest possible distance between two points in flat three-dimensional space, ever, but that doesn't mean it's impossible to find a faster path between those two points and beat light there). The real impossibility is this telescope that will intercept the incredibly old light. There are just too many problems with this, such as the myriad of obstructions in space that would prevent that light from ever getting to your telescope. You'd never be able to get a clear image of the surface of the Earth regardless of the telescope strength. |
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The focus of this confuses me, as I don't have the physics knowledge to give myself a clear explanation.
If we can see bodies of space that existed millions of years before mankind, then given the amazing technology, we should be able to see images of the earth in previous states, but I have no knowledge to back that up. HOWEVER, when the OP spoke of going faster then the speed of light and then stopping to look at the earth. Wouldn't light catch up with you in less than a second once stopped? If so, wouldn't that result in seeing absolutely nothing from the telescope, or images of the earth changing so fast that the human mind couldn't comprehend it happening? |
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The reason why we are able to see light from millions of years ago is because that's how long it took to travel from its source to the Earth.
~Tsugomaru |
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assuming special relativity holds FTL leads to time travel but it also means you've lost causality, as effect can now precede cause. that's generally not a good thing |
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I could be horribly wrong but i think it makes sense given your original theory. Quote:
A telescope could never be made to see Earth as you left it, because in our hypothetic situation we have travelled faster then the light that is present time . A powerful telescope cannot make light speed up and reach its lenses faster, it can only magnify the light that is there at the moment. You would be seeing "old light", as you put it, which could potentially be magnified to see a clear image (given a path of space debris was somehow cleared). It wouldn't be time travel, but just viewing the past. |
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you need to understand the lorentz transformation for it and why it's a consequence of special relativity but: http://www.theculture.org/rich/sharp...es/000089.html |
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I do not belive that any interaction with the past is possible, because I belive that time is stable and consistant. If you were to fire an object at earth at 40X the speed we were traveling it would hit the earth in "real time". If we could comunicate instantaniously with earth then that signal would be going infinity miles an hour, but still you would only be speaking with people on earth in "real time". |
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Assuming we could "get ahead of light" and somehow wind up on the other side of old light from years past, I don't think we'd be able to see anything meaningful. I think such light would have been dispersed and manipulated to the point where, even with a powerful telescope, we'd be unable to make out anything at the level of detail required.
We can see the light from things occurring years and years ago -- including things that could have already gone nova by now, but I can't think of an example where we have seen light from the past from an object comparable in size to the earth with the same level of detail. Normally when we look at "old light," they're for large-scale things where any small-scale high-level detail loss via light dispersion is made up for by the sheer AMOUNT of light coming in that makes up the larger image which, from our planet, makes up for a detailed picture. I would assume that for high-level detail, the light from something as tiny as our earth would simply become too dispersed/mangled to see. I'd think of it as trying to view crappy pixel art at high resolution. It's still going to be crappy pixel art. |
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-special relativity holds true and -we can travel at superluminal speeds then -we can send signals back in time (time travel) it is a consequence of the theory deal w/ it note that we don't have any physically plausible methods of achieving superluminal speed |
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About what you would see if you were moving faster than light, I agree with gausmaster in that you would simply not see the light you're moving away from. Even a beam of light that is 0.0000001mm away from your eye will never be able to reach your eye.
You wouldn't totally see nothing though, because what our eyes pick up is more than the 180 degrees in front of us. We actually see about 10 degrees behind us on either side, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_field , so in those 10 degrees, we'd see light. As a side note, the light we would see if we looked forward would be at least twice as 'bright' because we'd be seeing at least twice as much of it in the same amount of time. I got into a discussion about this last night, and the other person said that we would be seeing light all distorted, and they gave an example which this morning I realized was incorrect. See, I've been thinking about this problem like light has individual particles. He was thinking about the light simply surrounding us, like, say, water in a stream. If we sit in a stream, we're surrounded by the water, just like if we sit in light, we're surrounded by light. Then he said, pretend we're moving in the stream, swimming downstream with it. At this point, if we're actively swimming in it, we're moving faster than the water is. Yet we're still surrounded by water, there's water touching us behind us. This stumped me for awhile, but there's one serious problem with this: the water changes speeds depending on where it can go. The moment we'd move in the water, the water comes flowing in behind us at a much much faster speed than it flows downstream. Light, however, doesn't do that, because we're saying we'd be travelling faster than its maximum speed. |
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This is Gausmaster's new account.
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The light sources inside the shuttle would still be emitting light that would bounce of the walls and other objects inside it, so there'd still be light 'trapped' inside and moving with you. My very first thought on this is that it would look the same as if we weren't moving, at least once we reached our travelling speed. I don't think we'd get any doppler effect or anything, because relative to the light, our movement hasn't changed at all.
As for light that enters in the shuttle, and then would say, touch the wall...uhhh...I dunno! I don't know enough about the properties of light to answer that really. It light were matter, then it'd get 'stuck' to the wall. But light's not matter, so I dunno. I suppose if it were still to get 'stuck' to the wall, then there'd be a serious problem, wouldn't there be? The shuttle would melt from the heat from all the trapped energy or something. This seems similar to another problem I was given in my grade 7 science class actually, one which I still don't think was answered properly at the time. (I'm not sure how it's similar, but it made me think of it.) You have an airtight jar on a scale with a fly sitting on the bottom. Does the scale pick up the weight difference if the fly takes up and is now hovering in the air? Now, I *think* I was told at the time that yes, it did pick up the weight difference, but I have no idea who actually tested this or not. If the jar isn't airtight, than I think it would notice the difference for sure. Also, there's the extra pressure of the air being beat down by the fly onto the scale which you'd have to take into account, right? |
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Mythbusters did this. They concluded that there is an aberation picked up by the scale but that was caused by momentum differences.
source = http://kwc.org/mythbusters/2007/04/e..._truck_bi.html |
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Bah, you posted too fast! I can't edit my other post anymore now. Not all matter would stick to the wall, if it were elastic matter, it might not. If we could call light matter at all, would it not be like 100% elastic matter and also bounce back at light speed + shuttle speed? If this is the case, then again, because we're also moving, to us, the light would just be moving at light speed.
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http://www.youtube.com/view_play_lis...EFE6A7EA479666
I love this show, its one of the few things I personally set our dvr here at home to record ( that and House :P ). A great walkthrough on Light and its speed, how the Universe can bend to accomedate the speed of light, how the Universe itself actually is expanding FASTER then the speed of light, and other neat stuff. Enjoy. |
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In other words, it's not really meaningful to say "would this happen if we could travel past the speed of light," because if we could travel past the speed of light, then information can too, and really the entire discussion becomes a bit pointless. EDIT: Whoops, for some reason I thought that I was responding to the most recent post in this thread, rather than the first post... sorry if I broke the flow... |
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:) Incidentally, wormhole travel: does this fall under the category of superluminal? Your own speed would not be greater than the speed of light, but you'd still be able to arrive at a destination before light. |
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it's superluminal with respect to an outside observer but not for the wormhole traveller itself |
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well since this is all speculation, I found a video you might be interested in watching.
this man is a genius. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-prt5d6m6s |
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Whether you think he's a genius or not, a clip about futurists has nothing really to do with what we're discussing here.
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One thing i think is important to keep in mind with this whole theory (obvious impossibilities aside) is that you all refer to the analogy of seeing a star that may have already went through a super nova and its 'old light'. When you try to apply this logic towards trying to see 'old light' i think that its important to realize that, unlike a star, the earth does not give off light going at light speed. It is reflected light from our sun. As small of a difference as this may be, you would have to consider the fact that if you try to look at light coming off from the earth it might go less than the speed of light. As a point of clarification, we can actually slow light through different mediums. So then would it not be possible that the light coming off of the earth would be going at speeds that are less than the speed of light in a vacuum? Of course thinking in terms of it as either going through the atmosphere or at least touching it enough to use the particles it hits letting it slow down. Also, im a little shaky on the whole subject of 'looking back at the earth' after speeding away from it at faster than the speed of light. To be able to see that specific planet wouldnt you have to have a direct connection of light to it so you can actually 'see' it? To explain, of course you would have light still hitting you from different directions, but i was always under the impression that to see something through a telescope you have to have its specific light hitting you already. If you have breached the light that is reflected off of the earth (of course only considering you got outside the original light reflected off of the earth at its creation) then you wouldnt be able to see the earth at all. One last thing, simply enough, if you were moving at extremely fast speeds AWAY from the earth, why would it matter if that somehow allowed you to see it in its previous states? I mean, you wouldnt be able to communicate with it (for radio waves and the like travel MUCH slower), and you wouldnt be able to even get back to it without the light catching back up and it making no difference anyway. To think of it realistically, look at the theory of relativity. Time moves relative to the observer right? So time would seem to move at different rates for someone on the earth as opposed to someone living on, lets just say, jupiter. Outsides the bonds of our earth we would be trying to time everything according to the system we use ON the surface of the earth which simply would not be the universal system of all the bodies in the universe. Our measuring system in accordance with the rest of the universe would feel rather useless for no matter how fast you are traveling through space, time will always feel different. Thus, time travel in essence would be a virtually useless argument outside the bonds of our own time system, or rather outsides the bonds of time relative to wherever you are. |
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Although I'm not saying that the OP's theory is possible, it would be much more efficient to just look at a clear, reflective surface from far away (like a man-made mirror and placed there or otherwise). It wouldn't require a rocket and you could look twice as far into the past, I think.
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i personally can't see any reason why OP's theory wouldn't work, with the proper assumptions. (FTL travel, indestrucible glass, etc).
He's just taking something we know for fact and applying it to something different. We are sure that we can see light from a million years ago, so why couldn't we go multiple times the speed of light and look back at light reflected from Earth from the sun? Same principle. Again, with the proper assumptions. |
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Why would seeing old light correspond to seeing an image of the Earth as it was when it was as old as the light is?
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It also wouldn't be possible to see it with any sort of detail, so the whole point would be lost. You might be able to see THE EARTH as it was a very long time ago, but you wouldn't be able to see any sort of detail of things on the Earth. In fact, I'd say the only worthwhile thing that could be done using this technique would be to get an image of Pangea as it actually was, but I would think that wouldn't even be possible since the distance required to "outrun" light that "old" would be too great. Quote:
Because the light coming from the Earth that is that "old" would have reflected off of the Earth a very long time ago and thus, it stands to reason that if one saw or recorded that light, what you'd have is an image of the Earth as it was when the light reflected off of it. Assuming, of course, that nothing blocked the path of the light or diffused it or anything. Speaking of which, how long of a distance would light have to travel before it would become useless for seeing this sort of thing? Obviously the great distances we're referring to would require a tool to see at all, but I mean... obviously if light travels in a straight line forever, it's not going to be "perfect" when it reaches the "end" of its eternal path, even if the light doesn't directly interact with anything. Y'know what I mean? |
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Sorry I'm picking on you so much, slipstrike, but I'm a bit finicky about scientific detail, and you're way off the mark in presenting these scientific ideas. |
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If our telescopes are picking up old light off of stars and giving us a good picture of it, is it really that big of a stretch to imagine that the same process could be used with better technology to a planet from a similar distance? And yeah, this is all really just a simple question: if it were possible (which it certainly isn't), would the same idea hold true? I submit that it certainly would, but anything you could see in this manner would be essentially useless. But if we could TRAVEL TO THE ENDS OF THE UNIVERSE faster than the speed of light, could we SEE THE BEGINNING OF TIMEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE? |
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There is no way time travel could be executed unless you could find a way of manipulating space and time. As of seeing our selves in the past due to light travel speeds I find this a very hard task to do.
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The impression I'm getting from the way this process is being described is like, "Light hits the planet, is reflected off, and goes out into the depths of space, and we're going to go supre fast past it, turn around and look at it!" I don't really see how that will let us see much of anything except "some light" even assuming we pretend that there's no diffusion at all. I'm presumably just missing something integral in the process here. Do I assume instead that we're just going really far away and then looking at the actual physical location of the planet, and somehow will be seeing it earlier in its history because we went away faster than light? Even assuming we also corrected for the fact that Earth won't exactly be where we left it either. |
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Source = http://van.physics.uiuc.edu/qa/listing.php?id=1170 |
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I suppose we also have toa ccount for the whole "Light can act as a particle and as a wave" thing. It seems like light as a wave would be the best source of the clear view you're supposing we might have, if simply because light as particles seems like it would be more susceptible to gravity and magnetism causing problems.
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I agree but aren't waves also susceptible to unwanted abberation through differing mediums? |
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I agree with that... The only thing we are looking into the 'past' of is the present of what's up for the future, which makes it seem like the past... but time has not been distorted in any way. Light doesn't travel through time, I believe. It's just a matter of the length of time it takes something to reach one place to another, in a revealing pattern. Even if we could see into the past, there's no such thing as altering it... If you could, altering the past, even just a TINY bit... it could cause devastating results worldwide... or could change for the better, but more likely would not. What is done is done. |
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Here is a theory/question: Would you be able to see different parts of the past based on how you focused your telescope? The fourth dimension is too complex for us to contemplate and play with right now, but under the circumstances that we somehow had the technology to travel faster than the speed of light, and made it light years away from earth and then aimed a telescope at earth, or even our solar system, it would make sense that you could instantly watch hundreds of thousands of years go by, simply by adjusting the focus on your telescope. Zooming in would fast forward time and slowly zooming out would rewind time. Sounds fun right?
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From my understanding of time, objective time is objective time. Your subjective time runs at a different speed as your speed approaches and even though we think it can't be done, surpasses the speed of light.
What would have to happen, it seems to me, is that if you moved away from the earth at almost the speed of light, when you stopped, and "fell back into" objective time, it would be the case that X years had passed for you, and a number >X years would pass for everything else. That would technically be time travel into the future because you spent say 1 year in travel and the earth has gone and "aged" 50 years. If you were to look at the earth, you would see earth as it "is now" but because of the relativistic effects of near-lightspeed travel, you would see it seeming subjectively older. It would follow, to me, that if faster than light travel -were- possible, that yes, you would technically be going "back" in time, but again, once you "fell into" normal objective timespace again, you'd still only see the earth as it "is now" but because of the relativistic effects of greater than lightspeed travel, you would see it seeming subjectively younger. I still don't buy the idea that you could look physically at the light which has already reflected off the Earth and gone very far away just by catching up to it super fast, and still see anything at all except "some light, quite diffused, coming from thataway" The only way you could see Earth, it seems to me, would be to look at Earth, and you'd only see it as it was "at the time" you looked. No movie versions of Earth's development, you'd have to travel around more at either more than lightspeed to go backwards, or less than lightspeed to go forwards. |
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All of this is, for the most part, just an idea because we wouldnt be able to test it out. However ill pose the question again, why does it matter what would happen? It would not be worth all of this effort to 'fly through space going super fast and look back' only to see earth at an earlier state (assuming it worked) unless you could watch life as it starts and develops. Even getting to this impossible point where we got past the old light to tack on the ability to have a telescope that could see microscopic cells and organisms grow would be too much. Even seeing pangea would give us what, very little information at most? The information that we would be able to learn would be not very usefull especially if you figure that once we get this technology we would have advanced to the point where we could figure it out without such a process anyway. Sorry if it seems like im ranting, but i just realized the pointlessness of it all.
Anyway, 'time travel' in the traditional media sense would suggest being able to do or see something in the past/future we didnt already know. This would then bring the point of if you did/saw something remarkable, would it alter anything or would everything stay the same because it was 'supposed' to happen. The biggest problem i have with time travel in the media sense is that if someone years in the future found out how to achieve something like this and the 'butterfly effect' came into to play then from the moment the technology was discovered until the end of time there would be infinite chances for something to go wrong. The worst of which being a catastrophy that ends the world for which all of us now would see as it unfolds thus making 'our' ability to get this technology unavailable or at the very least useless. |
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Or we're just already living the reality that is the result of all current and future trips into our past.
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-opinion from a scientist (albert einstein ;) ). Try non-sense. What currently see: stars AS they have shone millions of years ago (from another place made of many small images - if you have uber powerful telescopes you can see them as they are now). |
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Telescope uses curved mirrors! It does wonders, picture hubble as the most powerful with more mirrors and groovy technical things. If I could remember I could handle a more eloquent explanation, but basically you start with a curved mirror, light, and go from there (the light reaches the curved shape and the image becomes intensified and focuses it into a single one - how seemingly simple, we managed to get one IN OUTER SPACE!!!). It has more advanced operation features however, so now one can't say. http://science.howstuffworks.com/telescope1.htm |
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We caused a paradox, so I doubt that's going to happen. Plus the theory that no two entities can exist at the same time in the same place still stands, I believe. |
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Perhaps you misunderstand? The past that we experienced IS ALREADY THE ONE THAT HAS BEEN MODIFIED BY FUTURE TIME TRAVELLERS. That is, you cannot go back in time and change the timeline, because when you go back in time, what you did has already happened, since it is, after all, in the past. So any changes you were going to make ARE WHAT HAPPENED, and the resulting timeline which is our timeline is completely paradox free. As for the theory, I think you mean that no -one- entity can exist in the same time and place as itself? Like, I can't go back in time to my own childhood and give myself some winning lottery numbers or something? Even if we grant that as correct, that still doesn't suggest any inability to time travel, so I'm not sure why you brought it up. |
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and I guess I did misunderstand, so I do see what you mean now. I was thinking in a different context. I was a little in a rush with my thinking and sorta slipped on that. |
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Also, as far as the whole one entity existing in the same time thing, i think its important to realize that considering the matter involved it would just be like seeing a twin. Sure its the same person but the one from the future wouldnt have a huge "omg i looked into your/my eyes and now theres a paradox that ripped apart the space time continuum!" effect on interacting with his/her former self. |
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It doesn't depend on the time travellers from the future going to a certain time or another. From the point of view of our fiction, it is meaningless to consider 'the repercussions' of time travellers travelling to a point which is still in our future, because our future is not a fixed series of events yet.
It is only when you are dealing with people who have travelled to -your- past, does one have to consider 'changing the timeline' in a way that potentially creates a paradox, and my assertion is simply that there can be no paradox because we are already living the results of any and all meddling that was done, or will have been done in our past at any given moment. Put another way: Like the question of whether or not there is free will, or determinism (The answer to which is "Whether there is free will or not is irellevant because we have an incredibly persistant illusion of free will.") the question of whether or not time travellers to our past have changed the timeline is irellevant because we by necessity are the end product of those changes. If someone could go back and change our current fiction, the changes would cascade up in such a way that we WOULD NEVER POSSIBLY KNOW THERE HAD BEEN A CHANGE, so whether they CAN change things or not is irellevant unless you simply grant that any changes they make ARE what generated our fiction. |
Re: "Time Travel"
If going back in time was even possible, someone from the future would be here. It seems as if before we'd ever learn how to do that, we hit extinction since we do not see anyone from the future here unless they have already changed the past before which brings us to today. So either they were before us or not at all because 1. its impossible or 2. humanity will seize to exist before its figured out
Time Travel in my opinion is impossible and ive been following along with this thread, mostly Devonin's post since they are logical to even my understanding. ++ |
Re: "Time Travel"
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Re: "Time Travel"
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If backward time travel is possible, it works on a branching system. If the time stream branches at points of backward time travel, it allows for instances of time dopplegangerisms without introducing the idea of a paradox. The future where the time traveler comes from need not exist in that iteration of time, because it DOES exist in another dimension where he came from. |
Re: "Time Travel"
Wow dammit.
I was going to post my awesome explination but it looks like devonin has got it under control. xD |
Re: "Time Travel"
Time is just a concept. Not something you can go back in.
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The only chance of a correcting singular time line like you are describing would be for it to be paradox resistant. I think Futurama Bender's Big Score touched on something like this, but if I recall, the Universe just ended up ripping apart at the end anyway. Maybe a better example is the 2002 version of The Time Machine (honestly, it's the only adaptation I've seen). The guy builds a time machine to go back in time to save his fiancée. However, when he goes back in time and saves her, it turns bad anyway and she dies again in a different way, because if she never died in the past, he'd have never built the time machine. The Universe corrected the paradox by making it so that no matter how he influenced the past, she would die an accidental death to be the catalyst for him to build the time machine that would get him there. Now, take a step back. How could the Universe "know" what to do? I'd have to say that this would only be possible with an all-knowing and all-powerful god who would watch over the time stream, one who can even override our apparent free will to ensure that paradoxes are explained out reasonably without logical contradictions. Quote:
Or do you not buy into the concepts presented by multiple dimensions stacked upon each other? I think it's sort of silly to think that there could only be one instance of our reality that would need to be constantly written and overwritten as changes to history (or even future history) are made. |
Re: "Time Travel"
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Listen to a song (Monolith) Listen to m1dy speedcore BS for the next 5 songs Listen to monolith again Concentration level effected?? Kinda like slowing down time in a way, but only for your instant, which means in anyone eles perspective your going rly fast. correct? |
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Time dilation is a scientifically measured phenomena. It can be measured by highly accurate clocks. Even without a person on board a high speed vehicle, time dilation could be measured by COMPLETELY OBJECTIVE equipment on board designed to measure time. Actually... wow. Just thought of something. Time dilation on the Earth as a whole due to the planet's velocity moving through the galaxy. Is that possible or is the effect of it negligible? Then again, everything is relative and there is no "standing" measurement for anything... even if time was dilated greatly, we'd have no measuring stick that isn't also bound by the same motion that the Earth is on track with through the galaxy. |
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It isn't a matter of saying "What happens if in 100 years, someone developes time travel and tries to go back in time to prevent Hitler coming to power?" because the fact that Hitler -did- come to power already shows that nobody did such a thing. Whether that's because time travel included some means of guarenteeing that time travellers couldn't interfere in any way, or whether there's a group from further uptime whose job is to fix things people screw up, or because someone in the future went back in time to stop Gordon Jones from coming to power, and as a result of that prevention, allowed Hitler to come to power instead is irellevant, because whichever of those things might have been true, the end result was OUR PAST AS WE RECORDED IT. Were someone -ever- to go back in time to try and prevent Hitler coming to power, they clearly either changed their mind, were stopped, or failed in their attempt, because he did come to power. There are no paradoxes, because the past is already fixed, it is static and objective AND INCLUDES ALL MESSING AROUND DONE BY TIME TRAVELLERS. |
Re: "Time Travel"
Actually, time travel is possible.
BUT, it's so improbable that it will almost likely never happen. Also, if you went back and, let's say, killed your grandfather, a new parallel timeline would be created where you are not born. I'm not exactly sure how that would end up, but it's still interesting. |
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Which seems like the more likely explanation of your existance? "I went back in time, and killed my grandfather, which to avoid a paradox, created AN ENTIRELY SEPARATE UNIVERSE in which I wasn't born, for the SOLE REASON of avoiding a potential paradox involving my not being alive in order to go back in time" or "Because I do exist, I either never attempted to kill my grandfather in the first place, or I tried and failed" |
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The only thing we don't have an absolute theoretical mechanism for is backwards time travel. Quote:
These potential time lines are all existing within the 5th dimension and it's just our path along the 5th dimension that defines what form our 4th dimension takes. Quote:
And again, you are misunderstanding the concept of branched time lines. The time that you "created" actually already existed in one form in the 5th dimension and our actions through the 4th dimension just never caused it to come into being in our dimension. However, going back in time and causing a shift in the events of the past would cause the time line to shift in another direction. And even though the time line that we see as established time would have shifted to another place in the 5th dimension, our previous 4th dimensional reality would still exist at another point within the 5th. In truth, the only one who would be aware of the change would be the time traveller, who will be composed of matter from a different place in the 3rd, 4th, and 5th dimensions. But really, the paradox is explained perfectly on a branched time line. You killed someone who was your grandfather, but in killing him, all you did was put that time line on alternate path in which you don't exist. The paradox is irrelevant here, because the you that killed your grandfather is known to have time traveled to that time from a time and place where that man would have been your grandfather. Think of it this way: Your home is at a coordinate in reality which can be defined by a set of 5 dimensions, which for the sake of argument I'll call (0, 0, 0, 0, 0). Now, the point in reality where your grandfather was killed by a time traveler from what is for them an alternate future can be defined as, let's say (-1, -1, -1, -1, 1). All you're doing is moving from one point in reality to another point in reality. There is no wave of refreshing on the time line that makes the paradox destroy the Universe; this is not Back to the Future. And if there was a wave that refreshed the timeline, how long would that take? What would trigger it? Why do you believe the Universe KNOWINGLY avoiding a time paradox makes more sense than explaining that the person who killed the man who would have been a grandfather was a person from an alternate reality in the 5th dimension? Have you seen Sliders? You know how they go to other worlds and things? I believe in most of the worlds they went to, that world's copies of them were ALSO traveling through worlds, but sometimes they weren't. What they were doing is foregoing time travel and just hopping into the same point in time and space at different points in the 5th dimension. Would you consider their existence and affecting those "alternate" time lines to be paradoxical? |
Re: "Time Travel"
You could try not just reexplaining your point as though I fail to understand it, because I clearly do understand it. Instead, I was showing a way in which you can resolve the idea of a time paradox without having to presuppose the existance of multiple universes.
Nowhere in anything I said, did I even imply that the universe is in any way self-correcting, that the universe "knows" anything. What I said was "The fact that you exist shows that you did not kill your grandfather" Quote:
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