The
Big Question: Is time travel possible, and is there any chance that it will ever
take place? By
Steve Connor, Science Editor Friday, 8 February 2008
Why
are we asking this now? Two
Russian mathematicians have suggested that the giant atom-smasher being built
at the European centre for nuclear research, Cern, near Geneva, could create the
conditions where it might be possible to travel backwards or forwards in time.
In essence, Irina Aref'eva and Igor Volovich believe that the Large Hadron Collider
at Cern, which is due to be switched on this year for the first time, might create
tiny "wormholes" in space which could allow some form of limited time
travel. If true,
this would mark the first time in human history that a time machine has been created.
If travelling back in time is possible at all, it should in theory be only possible
to travel back to the point when the first time machine was created and so this
would mean that time travellers from the future would be able to visit us. As
an article in this week's New Scientist suggests, this year 2008
could become "year zero" for time travel. Is
this really a serious proposition? The
New Scientist article points out that there are many practical problems and theoretical
paradoxes to time travel. "Nevertheless, the slim possibility remains that
we will see visitors from the future in the next year," says the magazine
says, rather provocatively. It
has to be said that few scientists accept the idea that the Large Hadron Collider
(LHC) will create the conditions thought to be necessary for time travel. The
LHC is designed to probe the mysterious forces that exist at the level of sub-atomic
particles, and as such will answer many important questions, such as the true
nature of gravity. It is not designed as a time machine. In
any case, if the LHC became a time machine by accident, the device would exist
only at the sub-atomic level so we are not talking about a machine like Dr Who's
Tardis, which is able to carry people forwards and backwards from the future.
What do the experts
say about the idea of time travel? The
theoretical possibility is widely debated, but everyone agrees that the practical
problems are so immense that it is, in all likelihood, never going to happen.
Brian Cox, a Cern researcher at the University of Manchester, points out that
even if the laws of physics do not prohibit time travel, that doesn't mean to
say it's going to happen, certainly in terms of travelling back in time. "Saying
that the laws of physics as we know them permit travel into the past is the same
as saying that, to paraphrase Bertrand Russell, they permit a teapot to be in
orbit around Venus," Dr Cox says. It's possible, but not likely. "Time
travel into the future is absolutely possible, in fact time passes at a different
rate in orbit than it does on the ground, and this has to be taken into consideration
in order for satellite navigation systems to work. But time travel into the past,
although technically allowed in Einstein's theory, will in the opinion of most
physicists be ruled out when, and if, we develop a better understanding of the
fundamental laws of physics and that's what the LHC is all about."
Why is the possibility
of time travel even considered? It
comes down to the general theory of relativity devised by Albert Einstein in 1905.
It is the best theory we have so far on the nature of space and time and it was
Einstein who first formulated the mathematical equations that related both time
and space in the form of an entity called "space-time". Those equations
and the theory itself do not prohibit the idea of time travel, although there
have been many attempts since Einstein to prove that travelling back in time is
impossible. Is
there anything to support the theory? Lots
of science fiction writers have had fun with time travel, going back to H.G. Wells,
whose book The Time Machine was published in 1895 10 years before Einstein's
general theory of relativity. Interestingly, it was another attempt at science
fiction that revived the modern interest in time travel. When
Carl Sagan, the American astronomer, was writing his 1986 novel Contact, he wanted
a semi-plausible way of getting round the problem of not being able to travel
faster than the speed of light which would break a fundamental rule of
physics. He needed his characters to travel through vast distances in space, so
he asked his cosmologist friend Kip Thorne to come up with a possible way of doing
it without travelling faster than light. Thorne
suggested that by manipulating black holes it might be possible to create a "wormhole"
through space-time that would allow someone to travel from one part of the Universe
to another in an instant. He later realised that this could also in theory be
used to travel back in time. It was just a theory of course, and no one has come
close to solving the practical problem of manipulating black holes and creating
wormholes, but the idea seemed to be sound. It spawned a lot of subsequent interest
in wormholes and time travel, hence the latest idea by the two Russian mathematicians.
Apart from the
practicalities, what's to stop time travel? The
biggest theoretical problem is known as the time-travel paradox. If someone travels
back in time and does something to prevent their own existence, then how can time
travel be possible? The classic example is the time traveller who kills his grandfather
before his own father is conceived. Cosmologists,
renowned for their imaginative ingenuity, have come up with a way round this paradox.
They have suggested that there is not one universe but many so many that
every possible outcome of any event actually takes place. In this multiple universe,
or "multiverse" model, a woman who goes back in time to murder her own
granny can get way with it because in the universe next door the granny lives
to have the daughter who becomes the murderer's mother. Where
does this leave the time machine in Geneva? The
science writer and physicist John Gribbin, who explains these things better than
most, points to a saying in physics: anything that is not forbidden is compulsory.
"So they expect time machines to exist. The snag is that the kind of accidental
'time tunnel' that could be produced by the LHC in Geneva would be a tiny wormhole
far smaller than an atom, so nothing would be able to go through it. So there
won't be any visitors from the future turning up in Geneva just yet. I'd take
it all with a pinch of salt, but it certainly isn't completely crazy." So,
not completely crazy, just a bit crazy. So
will we one day be able to travel into the future? Yes...
* There is nothing
in the laws of physics to prohibit it, and events in Geneva are pointing the way
and could be a first step *
In physics, so the saying goes, if nothing is prohibited, it must happen at some
point * All we
need to do is to work out how to manipulate black holes and wormholes, and away
we go No... *
The practical problems with time travel are too immense to solve, and even if
you could, who would want to? *
You might travel back in time and kill one of your grandparents by accident. Then
where would you be? *
If time travel is possible, why are we still waiting to welcome our first visitors
from the future? |