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MeJennifer said:Just because a dimension d1 is orthogonal to a dimension d2 does not imply that d1 lies in d2's complex plane. It could be, but only if defined as such.
Feel free to demonstrate why Lorentz invariance implies such a connection.
Maybe it's because it's late at night, and I ought to get some sleep, but I'm not following you at all.
Basically, the problem here is that we have gone beyond the realm of talking about specific experiments to some sort definitional discussion or philospohical discussion, and I don't quite see where you are coming from and why you are making the statements you are and what you are asking for when you talk about physical interpretations.
Here is the way I see things.
An object or a person's path through space-time can be described by a time-like worldline. This worldline can be parameterized by a single parameter, the 'age' of the person (or object). The change in age of a person is given by the Lorentz interval between two nearby points on his worldline.
If we have a time-like worldline that intersects itself (which means that the worldline goes to the same location in space AND time for two different values of the "age" parameter, we have pretty much, by defintion, time travel. For instance, if the self-intersecting worldine is that of a person, a time-like worldline that intersects itself represents an "older" you meeting a "younger" you. Of course we probably don't want the worldlines to exactly intersect, just pass close to each other, so that they are nearly at the same place at the same time for such a meeting.
A closed timelike curve is a little more pathological than this. If we imagine a CTC that's a person, he would never be born, and would never die either. He'd just sort of exist - perhaps like the movie "Groundhog day".
However, if we assume Novikov self consistency (not required, perhaps, but I think it makes the most sense - this is the assumption in the billiard ball paper, for example), such a person would not be able to remember events from previous cycles (as he does in the fictional movie I mentioned), and would not even be aware that he was in a loop, much less be able to escape it.
Depending on the exact dynamics, it will probably be pretty easy to perturb a true CTC into a less-pathological but more recongnizable form of time travel, the self-intersecting timelike curve. You might also be able to have "multi-loop" CTC's, depending on the exact dynamics, which would probably best be thought of in terms of a phase space.
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