Time Travel: The Universe’s Greatest Thought Experiment
If you could travel back in time, would you? Physicists have been asking that question for over a century, but unlike philosophers, they have equations that might make it possible. Time travel isn’t magic—it’s a consequence of Einstein’s relativity . In 1905, Einstein showed that time is not absolute: it stretches and compresses depending on how fast you move. Travel close to the speed of light, and time slows down for you compared to everyone else. Astronauts aboard the International Space Station already experience this, aging microseconds less than we do on Earth. That’s forward time travel , and it’s very real. Backward time travel, however, invites paradoxes. Could you go back and stop your grandparents from meeting, erasing your own existence? The “grandfather paradox” illustrates why physicists tread carefully here. Yet, Einstein’s later theory— General Relativity —opened the door to spacetime geometries that might loop back on themselves. Enter wormho...