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  • Time travel can be complicated - and complicating, so let's ignore all the paradoxical stuff

  • and talk about a few simple ways that you can time travel without leaving your home.

  • First,

  • 1) Do nothing - you're already traveling through time! I mean, here you are - fifteen seconds

  • into the future since the start of this video! Easy, huh? The point is, we're all always

  • traveling forwards through time. But that's boring time travel. What's interesting is

  • time travel relative to other people. To do that...

  • 2) Start walking, and you'll travel through time relative to someone standing still! We've

  • known for over a century that time and space are really just two components of a single

  • "spacetime", and the faster you move, the slower time will pass for you. If you take

  • a walk around the block, you'll be 3 femtoseconds younger than your friend who stayed home.

  • Except, in order to walk around the block, you had to...

  • 3) Stand up. You're now further from the Earth, and so gravity is a tiny bit weaker for you.

  • Which means you've traveled through time relative to your friend who's sitting down. That's

  • right, more gravity makes time slow down, too. If you stand up for a minute your feet

  • will have aged 10 femtoseconds less than your head. On the other hand, GPS satellites high

  • in orbit experience less of earth's gravity and thus travel noticeably faster through

  • time than we do, which is why their clocks are calibrated to run slow.

  • But maybe you want to time travel more than a few femtoseconds. Get ready for your head

  • to start spinning - I mean, the universe.

  • 4) Because if the whole universe were spinning really fast, general relativity predicts there

  • would be time-loops all over the placeMoving along one of these loops, you'd always feel

  • like you were moving forwards in time, but overall you'd loop around and travel back

  • to a time and place in your own past. It's a little like how you can keep moving forwards

  • on the Earth, but Earth's curvature brings you back to where you started.

  • Unfortunately, our universe isn't spinning. Maybe it would be easier to build...

  • 5) An infinitely long, super-dense spinning cylinder, which would also curve space-time

  • enough to create a time-loop. The problem, of course, is how do you build something that's

  • infinite in size? Maybe you could just make it really really really big? MmmNo. If you

  • tried to squeeze this time machine into finite space, you'd need negative energy - something

  • nobody knows how to create - to make it work. Otherwise you'd end up with a black hole.

  • Wait, but what if instead of a black hole, we...

  • 6) Built a wormhole? Wormholes are hypothetical (but not physically impossible) bridges through

  • space-time, shortcuts that can instantaneously connect two different places and times in

  • our universe. If you had a wormhole you might be able to use it to travel into the past

  • or the future.

  • The problem is that no-one knows how to build a wormhole. Or, once you've built it, how

  • to keep it from collapsing: as Sean Carroll has eloquently written, "keeping wormholes

  • open requires a form of negative energies. Nobody knows how to make negative energies,

  • although they occasionally slap the name "exotic matter" on the concept and pretend it might

  • exist."

  • Well that's too bad... but as consolation, welcome to the future! Almost three minutes

  • have passed since the beginning of this video, and we have personal jet-packs now!

Time travel can be complicated - and complicating, so let's ignore all the paradoxical stuff

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