Futurism logo

Time travel

Time travel

By Sita DahalPublished 3 years ago 4 min read
Like
Time travel
Photo by Andy Beales on Unsplash

For centuries this question has fascinated scientists, philosophers, and scientists alike. Much of the ancient Greek philosophy had to do with the idea of ​​eternity, and the concept of time was still relevant to the world's religions and cultures. Over the years, physicists and philosophers have explored the various solutions to the grandfather's controversy.

More than 100 years later, the famous scientist Albert Einstein came up with the idea of ​​time. Einstein's special theory of relativity states that time slows down or slows down depending on how fast you are about another person. According to this view, the faster you go, the less time you have.

When flying at a speed of 200 million meters per second or 4.5 million miles per hour, passengers experience a faster time. Approaching the speed of light, the man in space grows much slower than his twin at home. But Einstein has shown that moving faster than light speed is not possible because size and speed are not limited.

This distraction was a headache for researchers, in part because, in Einstein's common sense of relativity, very little time would allow a viewer to walk and interact with him at a time without risking his life. Einstein was the first to notice that time is not constant, which is likely to slow down as we travel through space. Investigators analyzed the numbers and found that if you had a change in the past, the timeline would adjust so that nothing happened before you back in time.

These thoughts led Stephen Hawking, who was initially skeptical of the idea of ​​a time-back journey, to take the defense of the chronology, the idea that there are unknown natural laws that block the closed curves of that time. With this state of mind, suspected Hawking, scientists could find errors in the theory of time curves that would make them inconsistent. Naturalists thought that the passage of time might have been possible since Einstein first published his theory of relativity.

Einstein's calculations suggest that objects in our universe may be circular in space, with no end in sight as long as they are in a so-called closed curve, such as time. If this were true, or we could go back in time, we would not be able to change events to create a different future. Environmentalists continue to fight conditions such as coronavirus, in which the traveler can change events that have already taken place.

Controversy over the possibility of the passage of time arises from attempts to define it in the Lewis manner. In the philosophical sense of structure for example, what happens in the context of the passage of time about the context should be balanced with the situation. This contradicts the passage of time that the passage of time carries the difference between time and time and therefore the conditions of the time are not consistent.

Time travel is the idea that moving from one place to another in time is like moving to another point in the space of an object or person using a guessing machine known as a time machine. It is well-known that going back in time requires a tool, a "time machine," to get there. It’s about what the traveler comes up with, who steals a time machine from a local museum to make his time travel and then donates it at the end of the journey.

The concept of a time machine became popular in 1895 by the novel H. G. Wells's The Time Machine. The passage of time forward in the general sense of time is a visual perception understood within the framework of normal relationships and special relationships. An example of a time-honored relationship is that the celestial bodies move at the speed of light over the space of the universe.

Such stories are examples of the natural myths of time that follow well-known laws of physics and require no exception to basic scientific principles, such as the constant and unmistakable speed of light. Of course, according to Einstein's universe of special relationships, and they remain in our present power. Unusual apparatuses, circling at lightning speed while allowing people to run on time, live in a dream environment.

Wells' famous book Time Machine (1895) uses a sophisticated black time machine to gain control of the machine over time and return to the present time, retrieving his story to test future results. Over time it is now known that it is possible and not limited to myths, science fiction, Hollywood films, or speculation by scientists. For example, objects can travel for years at a great speed, even static objects.

GPS satellites compensate for this slowing down effect due to their high altitude and speed. This is important when you think about it because, in heights where GPS satellites orbit the earth, their clocks must be aligned with those of the ground for the system to work. This aging means that if you were to travel in space and return home at the speed of light, you would be thousands of years away from Earth.

The document describes various models and theories of the passage of time, focusing on Einstein's idea of ​​relating to the time of Minkowski's space, which is a combination of three dimensions and the magnitude of the fourth period. The time traveler gets into a standard rocket ship (not a special time machine) and flies in a certain direction. Eventually, you disappear by jumping forward or backward over time, but due to the general structure of space-time as it is magnified by the general perceptions of the relationship, the time you travel reaches a point in the past or future before it leaves.

Environmental scientist Ronald Mallett attempted to recreate the conditions for spinning black holes and laser rings to bend space-time and allow for the passage of time. This project can provide a good understanding of time in the fourth dimension, which is often overlooked due to space-time curves.

science
Like

About the Creator

Sita Dahal

Hello, I am Sita Dahal, I am an artist and love roaming around the globe.

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2024 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.