CHAPTER
10
WORMHOLES
AND TIME TRAVEL
The last chapter discussed why we see time go forward:
why disorder increases and why we remember the past but not the
future. Time was treated as if it were a straight railway line
on which one could only go one way or the other.
But
what if the railway line had loops and branches so that a train
could keep going forward but come back to a station it had already
passed? In other words, might it be possible for someone to travel
into the future or the past?
H.
G. Wells in The Time Machine explored these possibilities
as have countless other writers of science fiction. Yet many of
the ideas of science fiction, like submarines and travel to the
moon, have become matters of science fact. So what are the prospects
for time travel?
The
first indication that the laws of physics might really allow people
to travel in time came in 1949 when Kurt Godel discovered a new
space-time allowed by general relativity. Godel was a mathematician
who was famous for proving that it is impossible to prove all true
statements, even if you limit yourself to trying to prove all the
true statements in a subject as apparently cut and dried as arithmetic.
Like the uncertainty principle, Godels incompleteness theorem
may be a fundamental limitation on our ability to understand and
predict the universe, but so far at least it hasnt seemed
to be an obstacle in our search for a complete unified theory.
Godel
got to know about general relativity when he and Einstein spent
their later years at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.
His space-time had the curious property that the whole universe
was rotating. One might ask: Rotating with respect to what?
The answer is that distant matter would be rotating with respect
to directions that little tops or gyroscopes point in.
This
had the side effect that it would be possible for someone to go
off in a rocket ship and return to earth before he set out. This
property really upset Einstein, who had thought that general relativity
wouldnt allow time travel. However, given Einsteins
record of ill-founded opposition to gravitational collapse and the
uncertainty principle, maybe this was an encouraging sign. The solution
Godel found doesnt correspond to the universe we live in because
we can show that the universe is not rotating. It also had a non-zero
value of the cosmological constant that Einstein introduced when
he thought the universe was unchanging. After Hubble discovered
the expansion of the universe, there was no need for a cosmological
constant and it is now generally believed to be zero. However, other
more reasonable space-times that are allowed by general relativity
and which permit travel into the past have since been found. One
is in the interior of a rotating black hole. Another is a space-time
that contains two cosmic strings moving past each other at high
speed. As their name suggests, cosmic strings are objects that are
like string in that they have length but a tiny cross section. Actually,
they are more like rubber bands because they are under enormous
tension, something like a million million million million tons.
A cosmic string attached to the earth could accelerate it from 0
to 60 mph in 1/30th of a second. Cosmic strings may sound like pure
science fiction but there are reasons to believe they could have
formed in the early universe as a result of symmetry-breaking of
the kind discussed in Chapter 5. Because they would be under enormous
tension and could start in any configuration, they might accelerate
to very high speeds when they straighten out.
The
Godel solution and the cosmic string space-time start out so distorted
that travel into the past was always possible. God might have created
such a warped universe but we have no reason to believe he did.
Observations of the microwave background and of the abundances of
the light elements indicate that the early universe did not have
the kind of curvature required to allow time travel. The same conclusion
follows on theoretical grounds if the no boundary proposal is correct.
So the question is: if the universe starts out without the kind
of curvature required for time travel, can we subsequently warp
local regions of space-time sufficiently to allow it?
A
closely related problem that is also of concern to writers of science
fiction is rapid interstellar or intergalactic travel. According
to relativity, nothing can travel faster than light. If we therefore
sent a spaceship to our nearest neighboring star, Alpha Centauri,
which is about four light-years away, it would take at least eight
years before we could expect the travelers to return and tell us
what they had found. If the expedition were to the center of our
galaxy, it would be at least a hundred thousand years before it
came back. The theory of relativity does allow one consolation.
This is the so-called twins paradox mentioned in Chapter 2.
Because
there is no unique standard of time, but rather observers each have
their own time as measured by clocks that they carry with them,
it is possible for the journey to seem to be much shorter for the
space travelers than for those who remain on earth. But there would
not be much joy in returning from a space voyage a few years older
to find that everyone you had left behind was dead and gone thousands
of years ago. So in order to have any human interest in their stories,
science fiction writers had to suppose that we would one day discover
how to travel faster than light. What most of thee authors dont
seem to have realized is that if you can travel faster than light,
the theory of relativity implies you can also travel back in the,
as the following limerick says:
There was a young lady of Wight
Who traveled much faster than light.
She departed one day,
In a relative way,
And arrived on the previous night
The
point is that the theory of relativity says hat there is no unique
measure of time that all observers will agree on Rather, each observer
has his or her own measure of time. If it is possible for a rocket
traveling below the speed of light to get from event A (say, the
final of the 100-meter race of the Olympic Games in 202) to event
B (say, the opening of the 100,004th meeting of the Congress of
Alpha Centauri), then all observers will agree that event A happened
before event B according to their times. Suppose, however, that
the spaceship would have to travel faster than light to carry the
news of the race to the Congress. Then observers moving at different
speeds can disagree about whether event A occurred before B or vice
versa. According to the time of an observer who is at rest with
respect to the earth, it may be that the Congress opened after the
race. Thus this observer would think that a spaceship could get
from A to B in time if only it could ignore the speed-of-light speed
limit. However, to an observer at Alpha Centauri moving away from
the earth at nearly the speed of light, it would appear that event
B, the opening of the Congress, would occur before event A, the
100-meter race. The theory of relativity says that the laws of physics
appear the same to observers moving at different speeds.
This
has been well tested by experiment and is likely to remain a feature
even if we find a more advanced theory to replace relativity Thus
the moving observer would say that if faster-than-light travel is
possible, it should be possible to get from event B, the opening
of the Congress, to event A, the 100-meter race. If one went slightly
faster, one could even get back before the race and place a bet
on it in the sure knowledge that one would win.
There
is a problem with breaking the speed-of-light barrier. The theory
of relativity says that the rocket power needed to accelerate a
spaceship gets greater and greater the nearer it gets to the speed
of light. We have experimental evidence for this, not with spaceships
but with elementary particles in particle accelerators like those
at Fermilab or CERN (European Centre for Nuclear Research). We can
accelerate particles to 99.99 percent of the speed of light, but
however much power we feed in, we cant get them beyond the
speed-of-light barrier. Similarly with spaceships: no matter how
much rocket power they have, they cant accelerate beyond the
speed of light.
That
might seem to rule out both rapid space travel and travel back in
time. However, there is a possible way out. It might be that one
could warp space-time so that there was a shortcut between A and
B One way of doing this would be to create a wormhole between A
and B. As its name suggests, a wormhole is a thin tube of space-time
which can connect two nearly flat regions far apart.
There
need be no relation between the distance through the wormhole and
the separation of its ends in the nearly Hat background. Thus one
could imagine that one could create or find a wormhole that world
lead from the vicinity of the Solar System to Alpha Centauri. The
distance through the wormhole might be only a few million miles
even though earth and Alpha Centauri are twenty million million
miles apart in ordinary space. This would allow news of the 100-meter
race to reach the opening of the Congress. But then an observer
moving toward 6e earth should also be able to find another wormhole
that would enable him to get from the opening of the Congress on
Alpha Centauri back to earth before the start of the race. So wormholes,
like any other possible form of travel faster than light, would
allow one to travel into the past.
The
idea of wormholes between different regions of space-time was not
an invention of science fiction writers but came from a very respectable
source.
In
1935, Einstein and Nathan Rosen wrote a paper in which they showed
that general relativity allowed what they called bridges,
but which are now known as wormholes. The Einstein-Rosen bridges
didnt last long enough for a spaceship to get through: the
ship would run into a singularity as the wormhole pinched off. However,
it has been suggested that it might be possible for an advanced
civilization to keep a wormhole open. To do this, or to warp space-time
in any other way so as to permit time travel, one can show that
one needs a region of space-time with negative curvature, like the
surface of a saddle. Ordi-nary matter, which has a positive energy
density, gives space-time a positive curvature, like the surface
of a sphere. So what one needs, in order to warp space-time in a
way that will allow travel into the past, is matter with negative
energy density.
Energy
is a bit like money: if you have a positive balance, you can distribute
it in various ways, but according to the classical laws that were
believed at the beginning of the century, you werent allowed
to be overdrawn. So these classical laws would have ruled out any
possibility of time travel. However, as has been described in earlier
chapters, the classical laws were superseded by quantum laws based
on the uncertainty principle. The quantum laws are more liberal
and allow you to be overdrawn on one or two accounts provided the
total balance is positive. In other words, quantum theory allows
the energy density to be negative in some places, provided that
this is made up for by positive energy densities in other places,
so that the total energy re-mains positive. An example of how quantum
theory can allow negative energy densities is provided by what is
called the Casimir effect. As we saw in Chapter 7, even what we
think of as empty space is filled with pairs of virtual
particles and antiparticles that appear together, move apart, and
come back together and annihilate each other. Now, suppose one has
two parallel metal plates a short distance apart. The plates will
act like mirrors for the virtual photons or particles of light.
In fact they will form a cavity between them, a bit like an organ
pipe that will resonate only at certain notes. This means that virtual
photons can occur in the space between the plates only if their
wavelengths (the distance between the crest of one wave and the
next) fit a whole number of times into the gap between the plates.
If the width of a cavity is a whole number of wavelengths plus a
fraction of a wave-length, then after some reflections backward
and forward between the plates, the crests of one wave will coincide
with the troughs of another and the waves will cancel out.
Because
the virtual photons between the plates can have only the resonant
wavelengths, there will be slightly fewer of them than in the region
outside the plates where virtual photons can have any wavelength.
Thus there will be slightly fewer virtual photons hitting the inside
surfaces of the plates than the outside surfaces. One would therefore
expect a force on the plates, pushing them toward each other. This
force has actually been detected and has the predicted value. Thus
we have experimental evidence that virtual particles exist and have
real effects.
The
fact that there are fewer virtual photons between the plates means
that their energy density will be less than elsewhere. But the total
energy density in empty space far away from the plates
must be zero, because otherwise the energy density would warp the
space and it would not be almost flat. So, if the energy density
between the plates is less than the energy density far away, it
must be negative.
We
thus have experimental evidence both that space-time can be warped
(from the bending of light during eclipses) and that it can be curved
in the way necessary to allow time travel (from the Casimir effect).
One might hope therefore that as we advance in science and technology,
we would eventually manage to build a time machine. But if so, why
hasnt anyone come back from the future and told us how to
do it? There might be good reasons why it would be unwise to give
us the secret of time travel at our present primitive state of development,
but unless human nature changes radically, it is difficult to believe
that some visitor from the future wouldnt spill the beans.
Of course, some people would claim that sightings of UFOs are evidence
that we are being visited either by aliens or by people from the
future. (If the aliens were to get here in reasonable time, they
would need faster-than-light travel, so the two possibilities may
be equivalent.)
However,
I think that any visit by aliens or people from the future would
be much more obvious and, probably, much more unpleasant. If they
are going to reveal themselves at all, why do so only to those who
are not regarded as reliable witnesses? If they are trying to warn
us of some great danger, they are not being very effective.
A
possible way to explain the absence of visitors from the future
would be to say that the past is fixed because we have observed
it and seen that it does not have the kind of warping needed to
allow travel back from the future. On the other hand, the future
is unknown and open, so it might well have the curvature required.
This would mean that any time travel would be confined to the future.
There would be no chance of Captain Kirk and the Starship Enterprise
turning up at the present time.
This
might explain why we have not yet been overrun by tourists from
the future, but it would not avoid the problems that would arise
if one were able to go back and change history. Suppose, for example,
you went back and killed your great-great-grandfather while he was
still a child. There are many versions of this paradox but they
are essentially equivalent: one would get contradictions if one
were free to change the past.
There
seem to be two possible resolutions to the paradoxes posed by time
travel. One I shall call the consistent histories approach. It says
that even if space-time is warped so that it would be possible to
travel into the past, what happens in space-time must be a consistent
solution of the laws of physics. According to this viewpoint, you
could not go back in time unless history showed that you had already
arrived in the past and, while there, had not killed your great-great-grandfather
or committed any other acts that would conflict with your current
situation in the present. Moreover, when you did go back, you wouldnt
be able to change recorded history. That means you wouldnt
have free will to do what you wanted. Of course, one could say that
free will is an illusion anyway. If there really is a complete unified
theory that governs everything, it presumably also determines your
actions. But it does so in a way that is impossible to calculate
for an organism that is as complicated as a human being. The reason
we say that humans have free will is because we cant predict
what they will do. However, if the human then goes off in a rocket
ship and comes back before he or she set off, we will be
able to predict what he or she will do because it will be part of
recorded history. Thus, in that situation, the time traveler would
have no free will.
The
other possible way to resolve the paradoxes of time travel might
be called the alternative histories hypothesis. The idea here is
that when time travelers go back to the past, they enter alternative
histories which differ from recorded history. Thus they can act
freely, without the constraint of consistency with their previous
history. Steven Spiel-berg had fun with this notion in the Back
to the Future films: Marty McFly was able to go back and change
his parents courtship to a more satisfactory history.
The
alternative histories hypothesis sounds rather like Richard Feynmans
way of expressing quantum theory as a sum over histories, which
was described in Chapters 4 and 8. This said that the universe didnt
just have a single history: rather it had every possible history,
each with its own probability. However, there seems to be an important
difference between Feynmans proposal and alternative histories.
In Feynmans sum, each history comprises a complete space-time
and everything in it. The space-time may be so warped that it is
possible to travel in a rocket into the past. But the rocket would
remain in the same space-time and therefore the same history, which
would have to be consistent. Thus Feynmans sum over histories
proposal seems to support the consistent histories hypothesis rather
than the alternative histories.
The
Feynman sum over histories does allow travel into the past
on a microscopic scale. In Chapter 9 we saw that the laws of science
are unchanged by combinations of the operations C, P, and T. This
means that an antiparticle spinning in the anticlockwise direction
and moving from A to B can also be viewed as an ordinary particle
spinning clockwise and moving backward in time from B to A. Similarly,
an ordinary particle moving forward in time is equivalent to an
antiparticle moving backward in time. As has been discussed in this
chapter and Chapter 7, empty space is filled with pairs
of virtual particles and antiparticles that appear together, move
apart, and then come back together and annihilate each other.
So,
one can regard the pair of particles as a single particle moving
on a closed loop in space-time. When the pair is moving forward
in time (from the event at which it appears to that at which it
annihilates), it is called a particle. But when the particle is
traveling back in time (from the event at which the pair annihilates
to that at which it appears), it is said to be an antiparticle traveling
forward in time.
The
explanation of how black holes can emit particles and radiation
(given in Chapter 7) was that one member of a virtual particle/
antiparticle pair (say, the antiparticle) might fall into the black
hole, leaving the other member without a partner with which to annihilate.
The forsaken particle might fall into the hole as well, but it might
also escape from the vicinity of the black hole. If so, to an observer
at a distance it would appear to be a particle emitted by the black
hole.
One
can, however, have a different but equivalent intuitive picture
of the mechanism for emission from black holes. One can regard the
member of the virtual pair that fell into the black hole (say, the
antiparticle) as a particle traveling backward in time out of the
hole. When it gets to the point at which the virtual particle/antiparticle
pair appeared together, it is scattered by the gravitational field
into a particle traveling forward in time and escaping from the
black hole. If, instead, it were the particle member of the virtual
pair that fell into the hole, one could regard it as an antiparticle
traveling back in time and coming out of the black hole. Thus the
radiation by black holes shows that quantum theory allows travel
back in time on a microscopic scale and that such time travel can
produce observable effects.
One
can therefore ask: does quantum theory allow time travel on a macroscopic
scale, which people could use? At first sight, it seems it should.
The Feynman sum over histories proposal is supposed to be over all
histories. Thus it should include histories in which space-time
is so warped that it is possible to travel into the past. Why then
arent we in trouble with history? Suppose, for example, someone
had gone back and given the Nazis the secret of the atom bomb?
One
would avoid these problems if what I call the chronology protection
conjecture holds. This says that the laws of physics conspire to
prevent macroscopic bodies from carrying information into
the past. Like the cosmic censorship conjecture, it has not been
proved but there are reasons to believe it is true.
The
reason to believe that chronology protection operates is that when
space-time is warped enough to make travel into the past possible,
virtual particles moving on closed loops in space-time can become
real particles traveling forward in time at or below the speed of
light. As these particles can go round the loop any number of times,
they pass each point on their route many times. Thus their energy
is counted over and over again and the energy density will become
very large. This could give space-time a positive curvature that
would not allow travel into the past. It is not yet clear whether
these particles would cause positive or negative curvature or whether
the curvature produced by some kinds of virtual particles might
cancel that produced by other kinds. Thus the possibility of time
travel remains open. But Im not going to bet on it. My opponent
might have the unfair advantage of knowing the future.
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