Prof
Michio Kaku on the science behind UFOs and time travel In
1600, the former Dominican monk and philosopher Giordano Bruno was burnt alive
in the streets of Rome. To humiliate him, the Church first hung him upside down
and stripped him naked. What made the teachings of Bruno so dangerous? He had
asked a simple question: is there life in outer space? Rather than entertain the
possibility of billions of saints, popes, churches, and Jesus Christs in outer
space, it was more convenient for the Church simply to burn him. Read
Nigel Farndale's interview with Michio Kaku For 400 years the memory of Bruno
has haunted the historians of science. But Bruno has his revenge every few weeks:
about twice a month a new extrasolar planet is discovered orbiting a star: more
than 250 such planets have now been documented. Bruno's prediction of extrasolar
planets has been vindicated. But one question lingers. Although the Milky Way
may be teaming with extrasolar planets, how many of them can support life? And
if intelligent life does exist, what can science say about it?
Some people claim that extraterrestrials have already visited Earth in the form
of UFOs. Scientists usually dismiss the possibility of UFOs because the distances
between stars are so vast. But last year the French government released a report
by the French National Centre for Space Studies, which included 1,600 UFO sightings
spanning 50 years, including 100,000 pages of eyewitness accounts, films and audiotapes.
The French government stated that nine per cent of these sightings could be fully
explained, that 33 per cent had likely explanations, but that it was unable to
follow up on the rest. The
most credible cases of UFOs involve a) multiple sightings by independent, credible
eyewitnesses and b) evidence from multiple sources, such as eyesight and radar.
For example, in 1986 there was a sighting of a UFO by JAL flight 1628 over Alaska,
which was investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration. The UFO was seen
by the passengers of the JAL flight and was also tracked by ground radar. Similarly,
there were mass radar sightings of black triangles over Belgium in 1989-90 that
were tracked by Nato radar and jet interceptors. In 1976, there was a sighting
over Tehran, that resulted in multiple systems failures in an F-4 jet interceptor.
But what is frustrating to scientists is that, of the thousands of recorded sightings,
none has produced hard physical evidence that can lead to reproducible results
in the laboratory. No alien DNA, alien computer chip or physical evidence of a
landing has ever been retrieved. We
might ask ourselves what kind of spacecraft they would be. Here are some of the
characteristics that have been recorded by observers. a)
They are known to zig-zag in midair; b)
They have been known to stop car ignitions and disrupt electrical power; c)
They hover silently. None
of these characteristics fits the description of the rockets we have developed
on Earth. For example, all known rockets depend on Newton's third law of motion
(for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction); yet the UFOs cited
do not seem to have any exhaust. And the g-forces created by zig-zagging flying
saucers would exceed 100 times the gravitational force on Earth - the g-forces
would be enough to flatten any creature on Earth. Can
such UFO characteristics be explained using modern science? In movies it is always
assumed that alien beings pilot these craft. More likely, however, if such craft
exist, they are unmanned (or are manned by a being that is part organic and part
mechanical). This would explain how the craft could execute patterns generating
g-forces that would normally crush a living being. Any
alien civilisation advanced enough to send starships throughout the universe has
certainly mastered nanotechnology. This would mean that their starships do not
have to be very large; they could be sent by the millions to explore inhabited
planets. Desolate moons would perhaps be the best bases for such nanoships. If
so, then perhaps our own moon has been visited in the past by a civilisation similar
to the scenario depicted in the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, which is perhaps
the most realistic depiction of an encounter with an extraterrestrial civilisation. Some
scientists have scoffed at UFOs because they don't fit any of the gigantic propulsion
designs being considered by engineers today, such as ramjet fusion engines, huge
laser-powered sails and nuclear pulsed engines, which might be miles across. But
UFOs can be as small as a jet aeroplane, and can refuel from a nearby moon base.
So sightings may correspond to unmanned reconnaissance ships.
Time
is one of the great mysteries of the universe. We are all swept up in the river
of time against our will. Around AD400, Saint Augustine wrote extensively about
the paradoxical nature of time: 'How can the past and future be, when the past
no longer is, and the future is not yet? As for the present, if it were always
present and never moved on to become the past, it would not be time, but eternity.'
If we take Saint Augustine's logic further, we see that time is not possible,
since the past is gone, the future does not exist, and the present exists only
for an instant. In
1990, Stephen Hawking read papers of his colleagues proposing their version of
a time machine, and he was sceptical. His intuition told him that time travel
was not possible because there were no tourists from the future. If time travel
were as common as taking a Sunday picnic in the park, then time travellers from
the future should be pestering us with their cameras. There ought to be a law,
he proclaimed, making time travel impossible. He proposed a 'Chronology Protection
Conjecture' to ban time travel from the laws of physics in order to 'make history
safe for historians'. The
embarrassing thing, however, was that no matter how hard physicists tried, they
could not find a law to prevent time travel. Apparently, time travel seems to
be consistent with the known laws of physics. Unable to find any physical law
that makes time travel impossible, Hawking recently changed his mind. He made
headlines when he said, 'Time travel may be possible, but it is not practical.' Time
travel to the future is possible and has been experimentally verified millions
of times. If an astronaut were to travel near the speed of light, it might take
him, say, one minute to reach the nearest stars. Four years would have elapsed
on Earth, but for him only one minute would have passed, because time would have
slowed down inside the rocket ship. Hence he would have travelled four years into
the future, as experienced here on Earth. (Our astronauts actually take a short
trip into the future every time they go into outer space. As they travel at 18,000
miles per hour above the Earth, their clocks beat a tiny bit slower than clocks
on Earth. The world record for travelling into the future is held by the Russian
cosmonaut Sergei Avdeyev, who orbited for 748 days and was hence hurled .02 seconds
into the future.) So a time machine that can take us into the future is consistent
with Einstein's special theory of relativity. But what about going backwards in
time? If we could
journey back into the past, history would be impossible to write. As soon as a
historian recorded the history of the past, someone could go back into the past
and rewrite it. Not only would time machines put historians out of business, but
they would enable us to alter the course of time at will. If, for example, we
were to go back to the era of the dinosaurs and accidentally step on a mammal
that happened to be our ancestor, perhaps we would accidentally wipe out the entire
human race. History would become an unending, madcap Monty Python episode, as
tourists from the future trampled over historic events while trying to get the
best camera angle. But
perhaps the thorniest problems are the logical paradoxes raised by time travel.
For example, what happens if we kill our parents before we are born? This is a
logical impossibility. It is sometimes called the 'grandfather paradox'. There
are three ways to resolve these paradoxes. First, perhaps you simply repeat past
history when you go back in time, therefore fulfilling the past. In this case,
you have no free will. You are forced to complete the past as it was written.
Thus, if you go back into the past to give the secret of time travel to your younger
self, then it was meant to happen that way. The secret of time travel came from
the future. It was destiny. (But this does not tell us where the original idea
came from.) Second,
you have free will, so you can change the past, but within limits. Your free will
is not allowed to create a time paradox. Whenever you try to kill your parents
before you are born, a mysterious force prevents you from pulling the trigger.
This position has been advocated by the Russian physicist Igor Novikov. He argues
that there is a law preventing us from walking on the ceiling, although we might
want to. Hence, there might be a law preventing us from killing our parents before
we are born. Third,
the universe splits into two. On one timeline the people whom you killed look
just like your parents, but they are different, because you are now in a parallel
universe. This latter possibility seems to be the one consistent with the quantum
theory. The film
Back to the Future explored the third possibility. Doc Emmett Brown (Christopher
Lloyd) invents a plutonium-fired DeLorean car, which is actually a time-machine
for travelling to the past. Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) enters the machine and
goes back and meets his teenage mother, who then falls in love with him. This
poses a sticky problem. If Marty's teenage mother spurns his future father, then
they never would have married, and he would never have been born. The
problem is clarified a bit by Doc Brown. He goes to the blackboard and draws a
horizontal line, representing the timeline of our universe. Then he draws a second
line, which branches off the first line, representing a parallel universe that
opens up when you change the past. Thus, whenever we go back into the river of
time, the river forks into two, and one timeline becomes two timelines, or what
is called the 'many worlds' approach. This
means that all time-travel paradoxes can be solved. If you have killed your parents
before you were born, it simply means you have killed some people who are genetically
identical to your parents, with the same memories and personalities, but they
are not your true parents. |