Blog: My Unusual Road of Life....
by kerminator

What is time any way?

Forget Everything You Think You Know About Time

Date:   8/26/2021 2:04:00 AM   ( 3 y ) ... viewed 745 times


Pocket worthyStories to fuel your mind
Forget Everything You Think You Know About Time

Is a linear representation of time accurate? This physicist says no.
Nautilus

Brian Gallagher

Read when you’ve got time to spare.
Nautilus


The Mystery of Time’s Arrow
619 saves
How the Universe Remembers


Studying time “is like holding a snowflake in your hands: gradually, as you study it, it melts between your fingers and vanishes.” Credit: Mobilos / Wikicommons.

In April 2018, in the famous Faraday Theatre at the Royal Institution in London, Carlo Rovelli gave an hour-long lecture on the nature of time. A red thread spanned the stage, a metaphor for the Italian theoretical physicist’s subject.

“Time is a long line,” he said. To the left lies the past—the dinosaurs, the big bang—and to the right, the future—the unknown. “We’re sort of here,” he said, hanging a carabiner on it, as a marker for the present.

Then he flipped the script. “I’m going to tell you that time is not like that,” he explained.

Rovelli went on to challenge our common-sense notion of time, starting with the idea that it ticks everywhere at a uniform rate. In fact, clocks tick slower when they are in a stronger gravitational field. When you move nearby clocks showing the same time into different fields—one in space, the other on Earth, say—and then bring them back together again, they will show different times.

“It’s a fact,” Rovelli said, and it means “your head is older than your feet.” Also a non-starter is any shared sense of “now.” We don’t really share the present moment with anyone. “If I look at you, I see you now—well, but not really, because light takes time to come from you to me,” he said. “So I see you sort of a little bit in the past .” As a result, “now” means nothing beyond the temporal bubble “in which we can disregard the time it takes light to go back and forth.”

Rovelli turned next to the idea that time flows in only one direction, from past to future. Unlike general relativity, quantum mechanics, and particle physics, thermodynamics embeds a direction of time.

Its second law states that the total entropy, or disorder, in an isolated system never decreases over time. Yet this doesn’t mean that our conventional notion of time is on any firmer grounding, Rovelli said. Entropy, or disorder, is subjective: “Order is in the eye of the person who looks.” In other words the distinction between past and future, the growth of entropy over time, depends on a macroscopic effect—“the way we have described the system, which in turn depends on how we interact with the system,” he said.

“A million years of your life would be neither past nor future for me. So the present is not thin; it’s horrendously thick.”

Getting to the last common notion of time, Rovelli became a little more cautious. His scientific argument that time is discrete—that it is not seamless, but has quanta—is less solid. “Why? Because I’m still doing it! It’s not yet in the textbook.”

The equations for quantum gravity he’s written down suggest three things, he said, about what “clocks measure.”

First, there’s a minimal amount of time—its units are not infinitely small.

Second, since a clock, like every object, is quantum, it can be in a superposition of time readings. “You cannot say between this event and this event is a certain amount of time, because, as always in quantum mechanics, there could be a probability distribution of time passing.”

Which means that, third, in quantum gravity, you can have “a local notion of a sequence of events, which is a minimal notion of time, and that’s the only thing that remains,” Rovelli said. Events aren’t ordered in a line “but are confused and connected” to each other without “a preferred time variable—anything can work as a variable.”

Even the notion that the present is fleeting doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. It is certainly true that the present is “horrendously short” in classical, Newtonian physics.

“But that’s not the way the world is designed,” Rovelli explained. Light traces a cone, or consecutively larger circles, in four-dimensional spacetime like ripples on a pond that grow larger as they travel. No information can cross the bounds of the light cone because that would require information to travel faster than the speed of light.

“In spacetime, the past is whatever is inside our past light-cone,” Rovelli said, gesturing with his hands the shape of an upside down cone.

“So it’s whatever can affect us. The future is this opposite thing,” he went on, now gesturing an upright cone. “So in between the past and the future, there isn’t just a single line—there’s a huge amount of time.” Rovelli asked an audience member to imagine that he lived in Andromeda, which is two and a half million light years away. “A million years of your life would be neither past nor future for me. So the present is not thin; it’s horrendously thick.”

Listening to Rovelli’s description, I was reminded of a phrase from his book, The Order of Time : Studying time “is like holding a snowflake in your hands: gradually, as you study it, it melts between your fingers and vanishes.”

Brian Gallagher is the editor of Facts So Romantic, the Nautilus blog. Follow him on Twitter @BSGallagher.

How was it? Save stories you love and never lose them.

Add This Entry To Your CureZone Favorites!

Print this page
Email this page
DISCLAIMER / WARNING   Alert Webmaster


CureZone Newsletter is distributed in partnership with https://www.netatlantic.com


Contact Us - Advertise - Stats

Copyright 1999 - 2024  www.curezone.org

0.031 sec, (2)

Back to blog!
 
Add Blog To Favorites!
 
Add This Entry To Favorites!

Comments (20 of 340):
Re: Let's get a fe… been … 28 mon
Re: Thriving Marri… johnt… 31 mon
Re: Try to make ev… carme… 2 y
Re: How we should … chris… 3 y
Re: Medicine Recall James… 3 y
Re: If I had only … kermi… 3 y
Re: Is there balan… TomSa… 3 y
Re: Where we stand… kermi… 3 y
Re: Where we stand… Chef-… 3 y
Re: Black History … ren 3 y
Re: The brazen fra… kermi… 3 y
Re: The brazen fra… ren 3 y
Re: A Constructive… kermi… 3 y
Re: Were you in th… kermi… 4 y
Re: Critical Think… kermi… 4 y
Re: The Ministry O… North… 4 y
Re: Organize Your … kermi… 5 y
Re: Get Rid Of You… kermi… 5 y
Re: Forgiveness is… kermi… 5 y
Love is is a state… kermi… 6 y
All Comments (340)

Blog Entries (12 of 1929):
What is time any way?  3 y
Love never fails!  3 y
A revaluation of Americam Hi…  3 y
Who did you help today?   3 y
Are even more vaccines going…  3 y
Pleasure at the table?  3 y
Love is not selfseeking  3 y
One Way That Long-Term Marri…  3 y
Have You Already Had a Break…  3 y
Acid Reflux causes!  3 y
life choices are to seek the…  3 y
Look What Happened While You…  3 y
All Entries (1929)

Blogs by kerminator (6):
My Quest for the Truth of Lif…  2 y  (310)
Absolute Truth Some Wisdom an…  3 y  (291)
Ya’ think??  3 y  (275)
Brain Boot Camp or Mindset Ma…  29 mon  (224)
Southern Etiquette or life in…  3 y  (212)
Forgotten Words!  30 mon  (120)

Similar Blogs (10 of 185):
My News  by DetLew  10 mon
IT-blog  by DetLew  13 mon
WordPress plugins  by HowdyT  14 mon
Interesting Facts  by AnnaGerman  14 mon
Henry Blogs  by henryjonas59  15 mon
free credit score  by kaviharshu99  19 mon
Relationships in th…  by ExpertOK  19 mon
what does online pr…  by johnmike12  21 mon
Here is What You Ne…  by NoahCarr123  24 mon
Children’s health, …  by ExpertOK  24 mon
All Blogs (1,019)

Back to blog!
 

Lugol’s Iodine Free S&H
J.Crow’s® Lugol’s Iodine Solution. Restore lost reserves.



Bio Cleanse Detox Kit
”I have recommended it to family and friends already and am sure...



Wormwood Capsules, Clove Tincture
Hulda Clark Parasite Cleanse