Is time travel possible? - Colin Stuart

3,868,045 views ・ 2013-10-21

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Have you ever daydreamed about traveling through time,
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perhaps fast forward in the centuries and seeing the distant future?
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Well, time travel is possible,
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and what's more, it's already been done.
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Meet Sergei Krikalev,
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the greatest time traveler in human history.
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This Russian cosmonaut holds the record
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for the most amount of time spent orbiting our planet,
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a total of 803 days, 9 hours, and 39 minutes.
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During his stay in space,
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he time traveled into his own future
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by 0.02 seconds.
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Traveling at 17,500 miles an hour,
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he experienced an effect known as time dilation,
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and one day the same effect
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might make significant time travel to the future commonplace.
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To see why moving faster through space affects passage of time,
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we need to go back to the 1880s,
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when two American scientists,
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Albert Michelson and Edward Morley,
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were trying to measure the effect of the Earth's movement around the Sun
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on the speed of light.
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When a beam of light was moving in the same direction as the Earth,
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they expected the light to travel faster.
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And when the Earth was moving in the opposite direction,
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they expected it to go slower.
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But they found something very curious.
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The speed of light remained the same no matter what the Earth was doing.
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Two decades later, Albert Einstein was thinking
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about the consequences of that never-changing speed of light.
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And it was his conclusions,
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formulated in the theory of special relativity,
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that opened the door into the world of time travel.
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Imagine a man named Jack,
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standing in the middle of a train carriage,
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traveling at a steady speed.
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Jack's bored and starts bouncing a ball up and down.
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What would Jill, standing on the platform, see through the window
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as the train whistles through?
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Well, between Jack dropping the ball and catching it again,
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Jill would have seen him move slightly further down the track,
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resulting in her seeing the ball follow a triangular path.
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This means Jill sees the ball travel further than Jack does
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in the same time period.
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And because speed is distance divided by time,
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Jill actually sees the ball move faster.
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But what if Jack's bouncing ball is replaced with two mirrors
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which bounce a beam of light between them?
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Jack still sees the beam dropping down
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and Jill still sees the light beam travel a longer distance,
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except this time Jack and Jill cannot disagree on the speed
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because the speed of light remains the same no matter what.
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And if the speed is the same while the distance is different,
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this means the time taken will be different as well.
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Thus, time must tick at different rates for people moving relative to each other.
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Imagine that Jack and Jill have highly accurate watches
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that they synchronize before Jack boards the train.
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During the experiment, Jack and Jill would each see
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their own watch ticking normally.
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But if they meet up again later to compare watches,
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less time would have elapsed on Jack's watch,
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balancing the fact that Jill saw the light move further.
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This idea may sound crazy,
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but like any good scientific theory,
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it can be tested.
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In the 1970s, scientists boarded a plane
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with some super-accurate atomic clocks
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that were synchronized with some others left on the ground.
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After the plane had flown around the world,
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the clocks on board showed a different time
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from those left behind.
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Of course, at the speed of trains and planes,
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the effect is minuscule.
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But the faster you go, the more time dilates.
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For astronauts orbiting the Earth for 800 days,
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it starts to add up.
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But what affects humans also affects machines.
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Satellites of the global positioning system
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are also hurdling around the Earth
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at thousands of miles an hour.
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So, time dilation kicks in here, too.
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In fact, their speed causes the atomic clocks on board
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to disagree with clocks on the ground
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by seven millionths of a second daily.
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Left uncorrected,
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this would cause GPS to lose accuracy
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by a few kilometers each day.
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So, what does all this have to do with time travel
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to the far, distant future?
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Well, the faster you go, the greater the effect of time dilation.
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If you could travel really close
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to the speed of light, say 99.9999%,
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on a round-trip through space
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for what seemed to you like ten years,
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you'd actually return to Earth
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around the year 9000.
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Who knows what you'd see when you returned?!
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Humanity merged with machines,
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extinct due to climate change or asteroid impact,
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or inhabiting a permanent colony on Mars.
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But the trouble is,
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getting heavy things like people, not to mention space ships,
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up to such speeds requires unimaginable amounts of energy.
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It already takes enormous particle accelerators
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like the Large Hadron Collider
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to accelerate tiny subatomic particles to close to light speed.
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But one day, if we can develop the tools to accelerate ourselves to similar speeds,
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then we may regularly send time travelers
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into the future,
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bringing with them tales of a long, forgotten past.
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