It's possible that Einstein's theory explains why some
people have previously traveled through time.
It might be time to reevaluate your dream of becoming the
first human to travel across time, as experts now think that has already been
accomplished.
The majority of us grew up picturing what it would be like
to travel through time like Marty McFly after watching Back to the Future.
Researchers argue that time travel is extremely real and has been done before,
even though the real-world version might not have a modified DeLorean traveling
through eras.
People have been dreaming about it for decades. Many people
may be surprised to hear that science claims that time travel has already been
accomplished in a useful, albeit less spectacular, manner.
You may be thinking that everyone would be talking about it
constantly if this were true. Surely, there would be headlines
everywhere?
However, it turns out that time travel isn't as
spectacular as entering a machine and traveling to the past or the
future. It has more to do with the laws of physics governing time
and space travel.
All of this is related to the special relativity
theory that Albert Einstein first proposed in 1905.
According to Einstein's theory, time moves relative
to the observer and does not clock at the same rate for everyone. We
are all moving through time at about the same speed here on Earth.
On the other hand, people who travel at very high
speeds really pass through time faster than those who stay motionless.
Space travel can help with that. In a very real
sense, astronauts are time travelers since they are orbiting the Earth at
17,500 mph, which is faster than our speed.
The reason why astronauts who spend a lot of time in
orbit age more slowly than the rest of us on Earth may be explained by this
phenomena.
For example, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams' bodies
had technically spent a little less time than ours when they returned to Earth
after more than nine months aboard the International Space
Station. Simply because they were traveling more quickly than we
were on the ground, they had a slightly shorter perception of time.
According to this reasoning, astronauts such as
themselves are considered real-life time travelers.
In a straightforward statement, the BBC once stated that
space travelers "are spending more of their budget on speed than us and so
have less to spend on time."
The example of astronaut twins Mark and Scott Kelly
serves as a stark reminder of this peculiar phenomenon, which is called time
dilation.
Although both of their brothers have visited space,
Scott spent around ten times as much time at the ISS as Mark did.
Mark is officially six minutes and five milliseconds
older than Scott, despite the fact that he was born six minutes
earlier. This is because Scott's aging rate was slightly reduced
when he was in orbit around the Earth.
In fact, NASA's renowned Twins Study examined and
documented this strange discrepancy.
To put it simply, you age more slowly than someone who is
not moving as quickly as you are as you approach the speed of light. It's
scientific, but it's crazy.
Yes, that does sound a little difficult to understand. That's science for you, though—interesting, challenging, and never precisely what you anticipate.
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