Time Travel

you ever had a dream of a place where you've never been then say a day or a few weeks later you go somewhere thats very familiar and you're not sure why???

Time travel people.
 
Time travel cannot work without physical travel at the same time...

Remember...
the earth spins and rotates round the sun
and the sun moves around the milky way
and the milky way is moving out from the centre of the universe

without the physical travel bit, even time travelling 5 seconds will result in instant burial deep in the earth... or instant death in the vacuum in space

sorry.
Not correct,

Last week I saw an episode of Goodnight Sweetheart and Gary Sparrow walked through a wall and back to the 1940's there wasn't a scratch on him when he got there. In fact he looked a lot more presentable in his nice suit.
 
Travel related technology is not advancing at an alarming rate.

Today's cars use the same type of engine as cars did the 1890s.

The diesel engine is from the same period.

Electric trains are from the 19th century too.

Jet planes are essentially the same as they were in the 1950s as regards their engines. 1957's Boeing 707 was about as fast as today's passenger jets.

There has been no real breakthrough in travel technology for ages so I don't expect time travel will become possible any time soon, if ever.
 
Not correct,

Last week I saw an episode of Goodnight Sweetheart and Gary Sparrow walked through a wall and back to the 1940's there wasn't a scratch on him when he got there. In fact he looked a lot more presentable in his nice suit.
Remember that shite? One of the worst TV programmes I have ever had the misfortune of watching.
 
you ever had a dream of a place where you've never been then say a day or a few weeks later you go somewhere thats very familiar and you're not sure why???

Time travel people.

No, it's a glitch in the matrix....

Having become a disciple of deGrasse and Krauss over the past few years, I'd say it's highly unlikely..... Although, Thorne does counter this somewhat, I think the idea excites people, however, the reality is much more complicated!!!
 
Travel related technology is not advancing at an alarming rate.

Today's cars use the same type of engine as cars did the 1890s.

The diesel engine is from the same period.

Electric trains are from the 19th century too.

Jet planes are essentially the same as they were in the 1950s as regards their engines. 1957's Boeing 707 was about as fast as today's passenger jets.

There has been no real breakthrough in travel technology for ages so I don't expect time travel will become possible any time soon, if ever.

If time travel were indeed possible I don't think it's technology would have anything to do with "travelling" as you've termed it. Moving from geographical place to geographical place won't have any correlation to moving from one place in time to another place in time.
 
Most of us on here are time travellers. If you've ever been on a plane then you've already experience time dilation via the Hafele-Keating experiment learnings on special relativity.
 
I think if you buy one of the cars that were made in Northern Ireland with tax payers money, find a friendly but slightly weird but not in a paedo way professor, get a small and slightly shaking man who thinks he can act but in reality all he does is run around like an ex-leper and then invent some y shaped light box then time travel is possible.
 
"Backwards time travel is theoretically possible by several different methods using general relativity. However, each of these methods has its own peculiar problems that could destroy the time machine before it has a chance to operate.


If I am allowed to build something that cannot exist then I too can violate the laws of physics.

"There's nothing in Einstein's theory that precludes time travel into the past."
- http://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/everyday-myths/time-travel2.htm


Literally, you missed the rest of the sentence:

There's nothing in Einstein's theory that precludes time travel into the past, but the very premise of pushing a button and going back to yesterday violates the law of causality, or cause and effect.

More accurately than the previous post, the calculations in general relativity that this article is talking about are essentially loopholes that are closed by our understanding of the quantum world. You could argue that general relativity, if you literally ignore every other piece of physics, would allow backwards time travel potentially but it doesn't live in an isolated frame. This is like suggesting that you could potentially walk across the Atlantic Ocean because ice exists; whilst this is true the Sun also exists as does the wind and a million other objects.



Michio Kaku is possibly the least respected science communicator on the entire planet and consistently tells people sci-fi.

https://www.quora.com/What-do-physicists-think-of-Michio-Kaku

Well, as many of us have seen, Michio Kaku went on the CBS Morning Show to talk about the Higgs boson. He was energetic and enthusiastic and spoke with a lot of charisma. The one problem was that everything that he said during the entire interview was factually wrong.

Michio Kaku was speaking about another hypothetical particle, called the Inflaton. The Higgs and the Inflaton are almost certainly in no way related to each other. It is nearly impossible to make them even distant cousins in speculative theories. What he said about the Inflaton was more or less true, other than to imply that the LHC will have anything to say about it (it won't).

http://scienceblogs.com/principles/2013/03/19/against-kaku-ism/

Kaku is called by different media organizations to talk about such a wide range of topics that, while he consistently says wrong things about whatever he’s talking about at that particular moment, he’s usually only pissing off one subfield at a time, and the rest of science happily ignores him.
 
It is possible, ive done it. When i flew from Manchester to New York my flight was at 1pm, the flight was around 7 hours but i landed in New York at 3pm.... Fucking Spooky. When i tell people they either laugh at me or call me a stupid ****, but i know it happened.
If you'd flown there on Concorde, you'd have arrived before you set off.
 
was this not proved with the nuclear clock one traveling east and one west, there was a time difference on each direction certainly proving this can be achieved all be it one second is nothing but yet it can be done and what about the leaving earth at the speed of light theory to point A then returning back to find your children have passed away through old age while you have only aged the time of the trip
 
If I am allowed to build something that cannot exist then I too can violate the laws of physics.


Literally, you missed the rest of the sentence:

There's nothing in Einstein's theory that precludes time travel into the past, but the very premise of pushing a button and going back to yesterday violates the law of causality, or cause and effect.

More accurately than the previous post, the calculations in general relativity that this article is talking about are essentially loopholes that are closed by our understanding of the quantum world. You could argue that general relativity, if you literally ignore every other piece of physics, would allow backwards time travel potentially but it doesn't live in an isolated frame. This is like suggesting that you could potentially walk across the Atlantic Ocean because ice exists; whilst this is true the Sun also exists as does the wind and a million other objects.




Michio Kaku is possibly the least respected science communicator on the entire planet and consistently tells people sci-fi.

https://www.quora.com/What-do-physicists-think-of-Michio-Kaku



http://scienceblogs.com/principles/2013/03/19/against-kaku-ism/
But apart from all that, you can still go back in time in a Tardis or in a DeLorean can't you?

In fact, didn't HG Wells write a non-fiction book in the 19th century where he invented a time machine?
 
"Backwards time travel is theoretically possible by several different methods using general relativity. However, each of these methods has its own peculiar problems that could destroy the time machine before it has a chance to operate. Perhaps we can find one time machine among the lot which holds the most promise of taking us to the past."
- Bryan J. Méndez, Ph.D., Center for Science Education, Univeristy of California, Berkeley.


If I am allowed to build something that cannot exist then I too can violate the laws of physics.

Where does he say it can't exist? He clearly states "Backwards time travel is theoretically possible by several different methods using general relativity. " If it's theoretically possible, by definition, it can't "viloate the laws of physics."

Can't be bothered trying to answer the rest of your post as I'm going for me tea!
 

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