Back in Time: Impossible - Columbia
University scientists believe it is never possible to travel
back in time.
| "How
can you swim upstream in the river of time?" |
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The urge to hug a departed loved one again
or prevent atrocities are among the compelling reasons that
keep the notion of time travel alive in the minds of many.
While the idea makes for great fiction, some scientists now
say traveling to the past is impossible.
There are a handful of scenarios that theorists have suggested
for how one might travel to the past, said Brian Greene, author
of the bestseller, “The Elegant Universe” and
a physicist at Columbia University.“And almost all of
them, if you look at them closely, brush up right at the edge
of physics as we understand it. Most of us think that almost
all of them can be ruled out.”

(The joys, terrors and true possibilities
of navigating the fourth dimension, with quantum physicist
Michio Kaku and astrophysicist Charles Liu.)
The fourth dimension
In physics, time is described as a dimension much like length,
width, and height. When you travel from your house to the
grocery store, you’re traveling through a direction
in space, making headway in all the spatial dimensions—length,
width and height. But you’re also traveling forward
in time, the fourth dimension.
“Space and time are tangled together in a sort of a
four-dimensional fabric called space-time,” said Charles
Liu, an astrophysicist with the City University of New York,
College of Staten Island and co-author of the book “One
Universe: At Home In The Cosmos.”
Space-time, Liu explains, can be thought of as a piece of
spandex with four dimensions. “When something that has
mass—you and I, an object, a planet, or any star—sits
in that piece of four-dimensional spandex, it causes it to
create a dimple,” he said. “That dimple is a manifestation
of space-time bending to accommodate this mass.”
The bending of space-time causes objects to move on a curved
path and that curvature of space is what we know as gravity.
Mathematically one can go backwards or forwards in the three
spatial dimensions. But time doesn’t share this multi-directional
freedom.
“In this four-dimensional space-time, you’re only
able to move forward in time,” Liu told LiveScience.
Tunneling to the past
A handful of proposals exist for time travel. The most developed
of these approaches involves a wormhole—a hypothetical
tunnel connecting two regions of space-time. The regions bridged
could be two completely different universes or two parts of
one universe. Matter can travel through either mouth of the
wormhole to reach a destination on the other side.
“Wormholes are the future, wormholes are the past,”
said Michio Kaku, author of “Hyperspace” and “Parallel
Worlds” and a physicist at the City University of New
York. “But we have to be very careful. The gasoline
necessary to energize a time machine is far beyond anything
that we can assemble with today’s technology.”
To punch a hole into the fabric of space-time, Kaku explained,
would require the energy of a star or negative energy, an
exotic entity with an energy of less than nothing.
Greene, an expert on string theory—which views matter
in a minimum of 10 dimensions and tries to bridge the gap
between particle physics and nature's fundamental forces,
questioned this scenario.
“Many people who study the subject doubt that that approach
has any chance of working,” Greene said in an interview
. “But the basic idea if you’re very, very optimistic
is that if you fiddle with the wormhole openings, you can
make it not only a shortcut from a point in space to another
point in space, but a shortcut from one moment in time to
another moment in time.”
Cosmic strings
Another popular theory for potential time travelers involves
something called cosmic strings—narrow tubes of energy
stretched across the entire length of the ever-expanding universe.
These skinny regions, leftover from the early cosmos, are
predicted to contain huge amounts of mass and therefore could
warp the space-time around them.

Cosmic strings are either infinite or they’re
in loops, with no ends, said J. Richard Gott, author of “Time
Travel in Einstein's Universe” and an astrophysicist
at Princeton University. “So they are either like spaghetti
or SpaghettiO’s.”
The approach of two such strings parallel to each other, said
Gott, will bend space-time so vigorously and in such a particular
configuration that might make time travel possible, in theory.
“This is a project that a super civilization might attempt,”
Gott told LiveScience. “It’s far beyond what we
can do. We’re a civilization that’s not even controlling
the energy resources of our planet.”
Impossible, for now
Mathematically, you can certainly say something is traveling
to the past, Liu said. “But it is not possible for you
and me to travel backward in time,” he said.
However, some scientists believe that traveling to the past
is, in fact, theoretically possible, though impractical.
Maybe if there were a theory of everything, one could solve
all of Einstein’s equations through a wormhole, and
see whether time travel is really possible, Kaku said. “But
that would require a technology far more advanced than anything
we can muster," he said. "Don’t expect any
young inventor to announce tomorrow in a press release that
he or she has invented a time machine in their basement.”
For now, the only definitive part of travel in the fourth
dimension is that we’re stepping further into the future
with each passing moment. So for those hoping to see Earth
a million years from now, scientists have good news.
If you want to know what the Earth is like one million years
from now, I’ll tell you how to do that,” said
Greene, a consultant for “Déjà Vu,”
a recent movie that dealt with time travel. “Build a
spaceship. Go near the speed of light for a length of time—that
I could calculate. Come back to Earth, and when you step out
of your ship you will have aged perhaps one year while the
Earth would have aged one million years. You would have traveled
to Earth’s future.”
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