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Interview: Dan Falk

Not only is leaping into the future possible, but it happens constantly, says a Canadian science writer

June 18, 2009 09:57

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

5 min read

Dan Falk is bang on time for our interview. This would not normally be a fact worth noting. He is after all an accomplished and almost certainly a very punctual science writer who is used to making and keeping appointments. However, given the nature of our conversation, it is significant – particularly when he reveals that the time is actually different for him than it is for me.

Falk, the Canadian author of a new book on the philosophy, science, history and psychology of time, sits no more than three feet away from me across a desk. Yet this does not mean that time is running at the same speed for both of us. For as Einstein discovered nearly a century ago, time does not go in a straight line – rather, it is bendy, warped and changes relative to where you are standing in the universe and how fast you are moving. “It seems like you and I are experiencing time in exactly the same way but we are not,” says Falk. “If you and I had a really good atomic clock, they would eventually get out of synch because one of us would be slightly nearer the equator and would be spinning around the earth a little faster – I might also be nearer to a heavy object and subject to its gravitational pull which also affects time.”

Obviously the difference in time between us is so negligible so as not to be observable or even measurable except on the most sensitive equipment – but this is only because we are relatively static and slow moving.

Speed things up a little and things become much more interesting. Falk gives the example of Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev who has spent 800 days in the earth’s orbit – longer than any other human. During this time, because of the speed and distance he travelled around the planet, time effectively shrunk for him, meaning that at the end of his journey he would have been one fiftieth of a second younger than he would have been he had he not left the earth’s atmosphere. Says Falk: “He has effectively travelled one fiftieth of a second into the future. It’s such a small amount that you can dismiss it – it’s not as if your family won’t recognise you. But take the same principle further and the results are more spectacular. I give an example in the book of a man who takes a voyage around the Milky Way galaxy in a space ship which gradually accelerates to a speed close to the speed of light. Obviously the technology to make us go that fast does not yet exist but if it did, his watch would tell him that he completed the journey in 23 years. However, when he returned to earth he would find that 150,000 years had elapsed, so time travel into the future is certainly possible.”