Time Travel: Setup & Challenges for Safe & Accurate Travel

In summary, The Time Machine has an inconsistency where people outside the machine see the machine disappear, but the time traveller inside the machine still sees the outside world.
  • #36
phinds said:
I'm not clear on whether you are just using shorthand for what actually happens or if you mistakenly believe that time actually does slow down for a traveler. Just to be clear, it does not. The traveler's clock ticks away at the exact same one second per second as the stay at home's clock.

If you do not understand this concept of proper time, then you are making the common mistake of confusing time dilation with differential aging.
I already know that after travelling in 80-90 percent of speed and returning to earth, our age same but people in earth age would have passed some years.
 
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  • #37
L Drago said:
I already know that after travelling in 80-90 percent of speed and returning to earth, our age same but people in earth age would have passed some years.
Which does not quite address the issue I raised, it simply (and correctly) describes the effects of differential aging.
 
  • #38
phinds said:
Which does not quite address the issue I raised, it simply (and correctly) describes the effects of differential aging.
A closed timelike curve is a theoretical path where space time is bend in such a way that you can go to past.


The energy required is enormous. It can be created by spinning black holes or something like that.

It is like you start somewhere in time in a CTC and no matter what you end in the same time means theoretically time travel to past is possible and a big thanks to you for changing my perspective.
 
  • #39
L Drago said:
It is like you start somewhere in time in a CTC and no matter what you end in the same time means theoretically time travel to past is possible and a big thanks to you for changing my perspective.
Which (1) is not true and (2) still does not address the issue I raised.

Do you or do you not believe that time slows down for you when you travel?
 
  • #40
phinds said:
Which (1) is not true and (2) still does not address the issue I raised.

Do you or do you not believe that time slows down for you when you travel?
I do believe that time slows down for us when we travel due to Einstein's time dilation.
 
  • #41
phinds said:
Which (1) is not true and (2) still does not address the issue I raised.

Do you or do you not believe that time slows down for you when you travel?
I was telling it is like a circular loop connection between two points in space time fabric and though we will theoretically be able to time travel in past we will be stuck in that loop forever. Kindly explain where I am wrong. I am asking politely for correction.
 
  • #42
L Drago said:
I was telling it is like a circular loop connection between two points in space time fabric and though we will theoretically be able to time travel in past we will be stuck in that loop forever. Kindly explain where I am wrong. I am asking politely for correction.
AGAIN, my question is, do you or do you not believe that time slows down for you when you travel? I'm just trying to make sure you are clear on this. It has nothing to do with time loops or CTCs.
 
  • #43
phinds said:
AGAIN, my question is, do you or do you not believe that time slows down for you when you travel? I'm just trying to make sure you are clear on this. It has nothing to do with time loops or CTCs.
Yes, I believe that time slows down for us when we travel. Time dilation
 
  • #46
L Drago said:
Yes, I believe that time slows down for us when we travel. Time dilation
Thank you for the clarification. You are wrong of course, as you will understand after reading the link that @berkeman provided.

Just to help you understand, think about this. You are now traveling at zero speed relative to the chair you are sitting in, but you are also traveling at a modest percent of the speed of light relative to a slow moving cosmic particle, and you are also traveling at almost the full speed of light relative to a particle moving in the CERN accelerator. You are, in fact, traveling at an infinite number of different speeds, all just depending on finding the right object to correlate your speed to.

In all of these, you are time dilated by different amounts. If your understanding were true then all of these different amounts of time dilation would have to be the same, which is of course mathematically nonsensical.
 
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  • #47
phinds said:
Thank you for the clarification. You are wrong of course, as you will understand after reading the link that @berkeman provided.

Just to help you understand, think about this. You are now traveling at zero speed relative to the chair you are sitting in, but you are also traveling at a modest percent of the speed of light relative to a slow moving cosmic particle, and you are also traveling at almost the full speed of light relative to a particle moving in the CERN accelerator. You are, in fact, traveling at an infinite number of different speeds, all just depending on finding the right object to correlate your speed to.

In all of these, you are time dilated by different amounts. If your understanding were true then all of these different amounts of time dilation would have to be the same, which is of course mathematically nonsensical.
Thank you. I think I need to read articles from authentic sources like Physics forum than reading articles from random sources in internet and random videos in YouTube which do not give such a clear explanation.
 
  • #48
phinds said:
I'm not clear on whether you are just using shorthand for what actually happens or if you mistakenly believe that time actually does slow down for a traveler. Just to be clear, it does not. The traveler's clock ticks away at the exact same one second per second as the stay at home's clock.

If you do not understand this concept of proper time, then you are making the common mistake of confusing time dilation with differential aging.
From reading some sources. I think this is correct.

While travelling at very high speeds time passes normally clock ticks normally for us but very much time is passed on the Earth. Apology I was mistaken earlier that time would tick slowly for us
 
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