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While we are no longer so naive as to think that a mechanical
device such as H.G. Wells's Time Machine could be easily built, the "new
physics" offers us tantalizing glimpses of the possibility of time
travel, possibly utilizing forces and entities which exist, at least theoretically,
in our universe today. "The notion you can move forward and back
in time is allowed by some of the new ideas in physics," says Jeffrey
R. Kuhn, a physics and astronomy professor at Michigan State University.(2)
The scientific premises suggesting a theoretical time travel mechanism
are Einstein's Theory of Relativity and its successor, quantum mechanics.
Einstein's inclusion of time as simply another basic dimension of physical
reality, like width and height, and his mathematical equations using the
speed of light as a cosmic "speed limit," paved the way for
quantum mechanics' description of the physical universe in terms of black
holes, singularities, and "cosmic strings," concepts which at
times defy "rationality."(3) MIT Professor Alan Guth has given
us a concise summary of the Theory of Relativity: "Space tells matter
how to move. Matter tells space how to curve."(4)
If we envision the concept of spacetime as a bedsheet held at the
four corners, we can immediately see these implications of Relativity
if we place a tennis ball in the center of the sheet; the flat sheet of
spacetime is distorted into a curve with the ball at the center, matter
telling space how to curve. If we place a second ball on the surface,
the new ball rolls toward the indentation made by the first, curved space
telling matter how to move. If we place a bowling ball in the center of
our flat spacetime, the indentation will be very deep, possibly tearing
a hole in the fabric of our spacetime, a black hole. If we view spacetime
from beneath the flat sheet, we will see the bowling ball as a protruding
shape, the black hole has emerged on the "other side of time"
as a white hole or possibly a wormhole.(5)
Keeping this scenario in mind, it becomes clear that what is needed
for time travel is an object which is massive enough to create a significant
distortion of spacetime, something larger and heavier than a ping-pong
ball on the surface of our bedsheet.(6) A brief review of some of the
current concepts in physics reveals several likely candidates.
Black holes occur when stars of a certain size use up all of their
nuclear fuel. A star in such a situation begins to shrink and become very
dense; the more dense it becomes, the greater its gravitational field,
to the point that nothing, not even light, can escape. An additional effect
is a distortion of spacetime (predicted by Einstein) with a resultant
slowing of time itself. Theorists speculate that at its heart a black
hole must contain a "singularity," a single point of infinite
density where the laws of quantum mechanics no longer apply, an "edge"
of the universe and of time itself. A person or object entering the singularity
would be subjected to stretching and squeezing (literally squeezed out
of existence), and would not survive to report the experience. However,
there are those who speculate that a free-fall trajectory which takes
a spacecraft close to the black hole, but not close enough to be swallowed
by the singularity, would effectively be a one-way time machine.
"By choosing the right path around the black hole, such a journey,
which might take a few hours according to the clocks on the falling spacecraft,
could be made to take as long as you like according to the outside Universe.
A hundred years, a thousand years, or longer," writes John Gribbin
in his book Unveiling the Edge of Time.(7)
Physicist John Wheeler has theorized that a black hole produces a
"wormhole" spewing vast amounts of energy into another, distant
area of the universe or into another region of spacetime.(8) White holes
are a similar concept, except that they are postulated to be the result
of other universes' black holes, spilling matter and energy into our universe.
In fact, what we call "the universe" may be a number of universes
connected by wormholes. The time-travel aspects of wormholes were addressed
by a consortium of Russian and American physicists; their scenario involves
using gravitational attraction to "tow" one mouth of the wormhole
until it rests alongside its opposite end, like laying the two ends of
a garden hose together; since time is a physical property of each wormhole
mouth, a traveler jumping into one mouth would emerge from the other mouth
at the corresponding time in that mouth's region of spacetime. The difference
could be a few hours or milennia, depending upon the disparity in spacetime
between the two mouths.(9)
The most exotic theoretical cosmic "objects," and the most
difficult to visualize, are the "strings" of energy which may
be remnants of the original Big Bang. Strings are "thin loops of
ultradense energy, far narrower than the nucleus of an atom, but stretching
across vast distances."(10)
Princeton physicist J. Richard Gott has calculated that cosmic strings
warp spacetime sufficiently for a spaceship to outrace a light ray, and
that two strings moving past one another in opposite directions would
change the shape of spacetime to such an extent that, "a spacecraft
looping around the pair of strings could return to its starting point
before it had left."(11)
FOOTNOTES