Why does time pass? | The Economist

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Why does time pass It is a question so profound that few people would even think to ask it yet its effects are all around Human beings live in a perpetual present inexorably sealed off from the past, but moving relentlessly into the future For most people time seems to be something that is just out there a thing ticking away in the background fixed immutable Time seems to go in one direction in one direction only, but physicists see it much differently John Archibald wheeler said time is what stops everything from happening at once I Wish I could explain what it would be like For there not to be time But I can't we experience time We are psychological creatures that have time and that's kind of one of our defining characteristics, so if time weren't around We don't really have even a good way to Describe what happens because happens, right? That's a verb right there that has to do with time So I think once you start wondering about this you get much further into the realms of philosophy than physics I actually don't think it's that mysterious. We live in a world That's full of stuff and this world happens over and over again with the stuff in slightly different positions Time is just the label on all those different moments that constitute the history of the universe It's very much like the page numbers in a book One of the great minds who changed the way science thinks about time was Albert Einstein in 1905 he published his special theory of relativity Which described the motion of objects moving near the speed of light? In it he demonstrated that time passes differently in different places depending on how those places are moving with respect to one another So first I'm Stein studied the effect of Fast motion, and he found that space and time got mixed up if you moved more quickly and that's his special theory of relativity the theory of relativity is so called because Even the difference between time and space is relative to what observer is doing the measuring in Particular to how fast you're moving This is something that we never notice in our everyday lives, but once you start moving close to the speed of light relativity becomes crucial Einstein showed that the faster one travels the slower time goes for the traveler at the speeds at which humans move this is imperceptible But for someone traveling on a spaceship at speeds close to that of light Time would slow down compared with its passage for people on earth One of Einstein's great insights was to understand That different people moving at different speeds through the universe see Different events as being simultaneous there was another important aspect of Einstein's theory which he didn't even realize when he published it The time was woven into the very fabric of space itself It was actually not line Stein but another German mathematician named Hermann Minkowski Who pointed out that Einstein's theory could be thought of as a theory of a single? Four-dimensional space-time and I signed when he first heard this idea said well, that's just a mathematician talking That's not really something that is very useful to physicists But once he tried to fit gravity into his theory of relativity. He realized the space-time concept was crucial Einstein used this insight to help develop his general theory of relativity which incorporated gravity He published it in 1915 ten years after his special theory of relativity which was focused solely on motion Einstein tried very hard he worked for ten years after inventing special relativity To fit gravity into the framework and eventually he realized he needed a new framework, so he invented what we call the general theory of relativity Where Einstein says that this space-time stuff this four-dimensional world in which we live has a life of its own? Space-time itself can move it has dynamics it has curvature and it's that curvature that geometry of space-time that you and I Experienced as the force of gravity and then he found the time was also Changed by your proximity to a very massive object so like a black Hole is the best example But also just how close we are to the earth or to the Sun or anything else that has a gravitational field changes the passage of time With the general theory of relativity he demonstrated that massive objects warped the fabric of space-time It is this curvature that causes time to slow down near them Accordian general agility time slows down near massive bodies It slows down any place that gravity pulls you tour Time slows down in proportion to the gravitational pull of a nearby object so the effect would be strong near a black hole But milder near the earth, but even here it can be detected Einstein's theories had to be taken into account when the GPS system was set up, otherwise it would have been inaccurate These ideas about space and time being relative sound very Wild and far out and removed for everyday experience, but to physicist. They are very very important. There's something we observe every day One of the interesting things about Einstein's equations is that none of them suggest time goes in only one direction They work equally well if time goes forwards or backwards This is in contrast to everyday experience One of the conundrums is that? The laws of physics for the most part do not distinguish between time going forward and time going backwards and yet the actual World that we experience certainly is different forward to backwards one scientist who puzzled over the directionality of time was Arthur Eddington a 20th century astronomer who defined the concept of the arrow of time based on observations made by the 19th century physicist Ludwig Boltzmann In space there's no preferred direction. There's no difference in the laws of physics If you look left or look right, but there seems to be an enormous difference between the past and the future That's what we call the arrow of time, and it's a little bit mysterious Why is the past so different from the future? We think it's not a difference in the deep down fundamental laws of physics It's actually just a difference because of the universe in which we live The arrow of time is just time as we experience one second following one other second following another second It's just the x psychological experience of time and the fact that Things change as we experience them, but it seemed to happen in the world forward so buildings get built But they decay slowly, and it's that decay, there's at least partially responsible for the arrow of time It's the increase of entropy so in thermodynamics. We know that things get more random over time and That appears to be very fundamental to our experience of time and what's happening in the universe? The arrow of time is based on the second law of thermodynamics, which says the disorder known as entropy increases with time For example a building left untouched will slowly decay into its surroundings it will disintegrate into a more chaotic state But it is highly unlikely that the building will become more orderly over time This is because there are many more ways for a system to be disorderly than orderly There can be many ways for something to break for instance but only one way for it to be put back together again a System will be less disordered in the past and more disordered in the future. This is the arrow of time So how can the arrow of time be reconciled with Einstein's equations if time can go forwards and backwards according to relativity? Does that mean it's possible to go backwards in time? We actually don't know whether it's possible to travel backwards in time. We do know it's possible to travel forwards yesterday I travel forwards 24 hours and Here I am right now You can't help but travel forward in time our best guess is that you just can't travel backward in time The theory of relativity does allow time travel to the future if I go down near a black hole And stay there for one hour you may go forward by seven years by the time I come back, so you've moved forward in time seven years while I move forward in time just one hour Einstein's theories do allow for the formation of wormholes in space these are shortcuts that link otherwise distant places in the space-time continuum So a wormhole is a hole in Space and time that comes out somewhere else And it does it much faster than the speed of light potentially so it would be a way of violating what we think of otherwise as a fundamental speed limit in Einstein's theories and It does it in a way that doesn't obviously violate Einstein's theories, but we're not sure that there's any actual way you can build a wormhole They might be shut off from the rest of space and time and so could never actually use it to do anything Although wormholes are theoretically possible, they're a highly implausible proposition That's because the equations suggest enormous masses and energies would be required to create and manipulate one There are two problems of the wormholes one is if you don't have one how you create it And the other is if you do have one. How do you hold it open? So it doesn't collapse and prevent you from going through and in both cases What we understand about these questions points toward a Conclusion that wormholes are probably forbidden by the laws of nature What remains then is a mystery? Theory fails to forbid traveling backwards in time, but practice suggests it might just as well be forbidden For now it would appear the arrow of time cannot be reversed No, one knows. Why time passes, but it seems that no matter how people look at it It goes in one direction in one direction only You
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Channel: The Economist
Views: 2,781,510
Rating: 4.875401 out of 5
Keywords: The Economist, Economist, Economist Films, Economist Videos, Politics, News, short-documentary, why does time pass?, why time passes, time, how time passes, how does time pass, how does time work, time travel, universe, albert einstein, spacetime, special theory of relativity, general theory of relativity, Kip S Thorne, worm holes, arrow of time, Second Law Of Thermodynamics, kip thorne, kip thorne nobel prize, kip thorne interview, physics
Id: OKKbkS_LOu4
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 10min 30sec (630 seconds)
Published: Thu Sep 03 2015
Reddit Comments

They never answer the question :-/ I was hoping for some completely incomprehensible physics about particles winking out of existence.. or langoliers, at least..

👍︎︎ 20 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies

Spoiler alert...no one knows

👍︎︎ 18 👤︎︎ u/Spankey_the_Cat 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies

Because of the second law of thermodynamics. Duh.

👍︎︎ 5 👤︎︎ u/Tboneheads 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies

Disclaimer: not a mathmetician or anything, this is mostly just a neat idea I came up with while watching and wanted to share. No basis in reality.

The guy in the video says two things, 1) nothing says time can't move backwards and 2) time moves more slowly near large objects. So that means time would move imperceptibly slowly at the big bang, or perhaps even backwards. So maybe the universe spends forever trying to find the perfect combination (the whole disorderly universe thing) where everything fits together into one particle, that becomes the start of the big bang which sends time backwards, and then it all blows up and starts over again.

👍︎︎ 4 👤︎︎ u/onlyusernameleftsigh 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies

Pretty neat stuff. I wish I understood more about physics and math, it's so fascinating.

👍︎︎ 4 👤︎︎ u/Socialdem 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies

i feel so much smarter now that i've watched this, but i never learned anything

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/rabbitsclaw 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies
👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/WetWilly17 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies

This was really cool thanks for the share!

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/KurageSama 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies

So time goes by faster the closer you get to something with a tremendous amount of mass. What if there was an equally large amount of something like antimatter. Would time go slower for you the closer you go to it? So much so that time begins to reverse?

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/RadClark 📅︎︎ Oct 15 2016 🗫︎ replies
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