Monday, February 4, 2013

It's that time of the month

When I created this blog early last month, my intention was to create something witty and fun, with a tad bit of satire thrown in for laughs.  I promised myself that I would find some time every day, or at least every other day, but definitely once a week at a minimum to write something.  Well, almost a month later and I'm finally writing my second blog. At this pace, I'll only have to write 13 total blog posts this year; an even bakers dozen.  At least I won't have to think much at that pace.  But, alas, this is not what I want.  I want people to experience the wonders of my strange mind.  So, I am reaffirming my original goal of writing one blog post as often as time permits, which means you can probably expect my next blog post sometime in early 2014.

So, in continuing with today's theme of time, I often think about time.  What is time?  This is a question that science and society have both been grappling with for as long as we knew time existed.  And when did we first realize that there was this thing called "time?" Did neanderthals wake up in the morning an say "Ug need knew battery for sundial" only to not realize that batteries hadn't been invented yet?  Or sundials for that matter...  So what did neanderthals think about time?  Did the passage of that huge glowing ball of gas in the sky mean anything to them other than 1) it's up in the sky and therefore I should go hunt, eat and claim some female by dragging her back to my cave by her hair or 2) it's not up, therefore I need to hide in my cave with a fire to avoid being eaten tonight?  And when did we first start to use the passage of the sun to mark time?

Science tells us that we've been tracking time, perhaps as far back as 6,000 years ago (well, if you trust wikipedia).  And that's a good starting point.  Early humans realized that the moon went in cycles that they could predict.  That predicted cycle became the first tracking of time, although it was inaccurate. The Mayans made a very accurate calendar, although even they couldn't predict the end of time.  Later, sundials made time more accurate, and much later Pope Gregory III made the Gregorian calendar, which was very self centered if you ask me.  Today, that calendar is used almost everywhere on Earth.  It marks the passage of time from year to year, month to month and day to day.  For smaller intervals of time, we rely on watches.  Here we see seconds pass by, seconds of your life, ticking away, never to return.  But they weren't accurate enough, so we created atomic clocks that use radioactive elemental decay to determine the passage of time.  These clocks are incredibly accurate so we now know exactly what time it is all the time.

But what about before all this.  If we measure time by the rising and setting of our sun (on a basic level of day vs night), what about before our sun existed?  If time is just a human creation to help us understand past, present and future, what about before we existed.  Was there time?  Did dinosaurs measure time?  They had 250 million years to figure it out. Much longer than we've had, although we have bigger brains than they did, so maybe they were just figuring it out at the end.  You know, T-Rex is talking to a Triceratops,

   T-Rex: "Hey, Tritop, what time is it?"
   Triceratops: "I don't know Rexy, what time is it?"
   T-Rex: "It's dinner time!"

But, again, these are human constructions, dinner time, play time, time to make the donuts... So did time exist before humans?  Did the universe care what time it was?  Time for a new star to form, time for an old one to die, time for a black hole to swallow up some cosmic dust, time for two galaxies to collide. And what about before the universe existed. Was there time before the big bang? Was there anything before the big bang? Was there a big bang?  What about after humans are gone from the universe? Will time go on?

Star Trek did bring up one interesting point about time.  In space, time would be somewhat different without a sun to set our clocks by.  Would we be able to "create" a day with 35 hours in it, and get more done?  The saying, "there's only so much time in one day" becomes obsolete when you can create the length of your day.  We're apparently locked into a biological clock that runs akin to the 24 hours of our day, but if we get away from that sun, would our internal clocks adapt as easily as our wrist watches could?  Would other species track time differently based on their perceptions of time? And what if we had lived 2 billion years ago when the Earth had an 18 hour day?  Would we have less time to get things done?  Or would it be the same, as it would still take the same amount of time for the Earth to orbit around the sun.  So we'd have more days in one year, but the amount of time in one year wouldn't change.  I bet Pope Gregory wouldn't be ok with that.

And speaking of moving through space, Einstein and other really smart people began to wonder what would happen to time if you moved at the speed of light.  If we measure time based on the appearance of the sun every morning, then we're perceiving time based on light.  If you can see an object at a moment in time, that specific moment is occurring because the light from the sun reflected off that object and bounced into your eyes.  If you were moving at just short of the speed of light (moving AT the speed of light is a whole other discussion) then the amount of light entering your eye would be different than if you were moving as we normally would, so time would seem to change for you, because the information reaching your brain would be getting there slower, if you're moving away from the object, and faster if you're moving towards the object (or source of light as the case may be).  And for that matter, what about the light we see from the sun.  We don't see the sun as it currently is, but as it was 8 minutes ago.  That's the amount of time it takes for light to leave the sun and get to the Earth.  The same can be said for all celestial objects.  We're not seeing them as they are now, but as they were at some point in the past. So we're all time travelers when we look up into the sky.

But what about time travel, as in H.G. Wells type time travel?  If you're a believer of Einstein, then you can travel through time by traveling close to the speed of light.  Since, again, time and light are related.  You go somewhere at near the speed of light, when you get back to where you started, more time in the normal moving universe has passed than what you've experience, so this in essence is traveling into the future.  That whole traveling to the past thing will have to stay in our memories for now, or until I figure out how to do that.  But that, again, is a topic for another day.

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