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The mystery of time travel
Published: July 3, 2005, 6:00 AM PDT
By Dennis Overbye
The New York Times
There was a conference for time travelers at MIT earlier this spring.
I'm still hoping to attend, and although the odds are slim, they are apparently not zero despite the efforts and hopes of deterministically minded physicists who would like to eliminate the possibility of your creating a paradox by going back in time and killing your grandfather.
"No law of physics that we know of prohibits time travel," said J. Richard Gott, a Princeton University astrophysicist.
Gott, author of the 2001 book "Time Travel in Einstein's Universe: The Physical Possibilities of Travel Through Time," is one of a small breed of physicists who spend part of their time (and their research grants) thinking about wormholes in space, warp drives and other cosmic constructions, that "absurdly advanced civilizations" might use to travel through time.
It's not that physicists expect to be able to go back and attend Woodstock, drop by the Bern patent office to take Einstein to lunch, see the dinosaurs or investigate John F. Kennedy's assassination.
In fact, they're pretty sure those are absurd dreams and are all bemused by the fact that they can't say why. They hope such extreme theorizing could reveal new features, gaps or perhaps paradoxes or contradictions in the foundations of physics as we know it and point the way to new ideas.
"Traversable wormholes are primarily useful as a 'gedanken experiment' to explore the limitations of general relativity," said Francisco Lobo of the University of Lisbon.