Time Travel

Overview

The prospect of revisiting the past or jumping to the future has captured people's imaginations for centuries. Our contemporary understanding of time travel is a marriage of theoretical physics and science fiction.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Five potential ways to achieve time travel

    While the author discounts the possibility of traveling to the past, it lays out five hypothetical modes of catapulting into the future: speed, gravity, suspended animation, wormholes, and light. Each has some scientific basis, but none are realistic for humans. Read the article to learn where they offer promise and where they fall short.

  • Paradox-free time travel is theoretically possible

    The grandfather paradox doesn’t exist, according to research out of the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia in 2020. They ran some models to determine that, if one traveled back in time and made changes to the past, those changes couldn’t dramatically alter the present. The original outcome that propelled the time traveler to visit the past would still find a way to happen. If true, would this make time travel less intriguing? Less scary and more attractive?

  • The origins of our fascination with time travel

    Humans have been captivated by the prospect of leaping forward and backward in time for thousands of years. Georgia Institute of Technology Science Fiction Studies Professor Lisa Yaszek recounts how the concept has been utilized by storytellers from 400 BCE to modern-day to explore our relationship with the supernatural, technology, and the past. In a way, this historical recounting is a journey through time.

  • A scientific analysis of famous time travel stories

    This 8-minute video explores how time travel influences the narrative arc of several movies, books and video games, from Harry Potter to A Christmas Carol. (Warning: it contains spoilers!) J.K. Rowling and Charles Dickens set myriad parameters as they’re worldbuilding to avoid paradoxes and create quasi-logical timelines. By drawing diagrams as he’s speaking, the video breaks down how time works in some of popular culture’s most beloved fictional universes.

  • The earliest mention of time travel

    Time travel has fascinated humans for centuries. It appears in myths, literature, and science fiction. One of the earliest examples comes from the 400 BCE Hindu epic Mahabharata, describing time dilation long before Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. By the 19th century, stories introduced machines enabling time travel—setting the stage for modern sci-fi.

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