I've never understood the concept on time travelling. I've seen countless numbers of science videos on time travel and they say something like if you travel fast enough you could.. go back in time. BUT HOWWW???! I just don't get it, "go back in time" as in YOU going back to the past and will you physically BE in the past? For example, would I be able to see the stuff that happened years ago again, be there, and literally change the past (i.e do my bio exam again... hahaha). GAHH! I don't know how to explain it without sounding so confusing.
All right, this is a tricky one, and I may not get this 1000000% correct, but hopefully I'll have the right kind of idea. It's all about special relativity.
First and foremost you need to accept that the speed of light never changes. So we'll let the speed of light be "c".
If you're stationary and you measure a beam of light, the speed of that light will (obviously) be c.
Now let's say that you hop in your super fast car and go 1000kph. Whilst you're driving that fast, you measure the speed of light. So if you're approaching from the opposite direction, what would you expect? You'd expect the speed of light to be c-1000 To your surprise though, this is not the case. It's still c. That's because it NEVER changes no matter how you look at it. That's a big point.
What is the importance of that?
Ok, so let's do another thought experiment to explain. You're standing on a bus travelling at 100kph and you bounce a ball. What's its motion? It goes straight down and straight up. So it's a really, really tight parabola. Basically up and down in straight lines. To the person in the bus, this is exactly how the motion appears, and exactly how it should appear. Pretend the bus is see through, and somebody on the side of the road sees the ball bounce. What do they see? The ball doesn't just go down and up, remember, the bus is moving along. So if you tracked its trajectory, it would go down in a really deep arc. The ball appears to travel further to the person on the outside of the bus.
Let's say both did measurements. The guy on the bus says that the ball travelled 2 metres. 1 down, 1 up. The guy outside the bus calculates that the ball travelled 12m. That's 6x difference! So who got it right? The answer is both. It depends on which way you look at it. It's
relative.
Now let's expand our thought experiment. Rather than the ball, let's pretend we do the same with a beam of light. Obviously, the light moves a lot faster, so the difference in distances would be minute, but let's just pretend for a moment that the light is really slow and moves as quickly as the ball.
The guy on the bus measures the distance travelled as 2m, whereas the guy outside the bus measures the distance travelled as 12m. Both are right, remember? Because it's relative. Light is a bit different though. The speed remains the same. In both cases, the speed of the light beam is c. Is the speed is the same, but the distance is different, what does that mean? Well given that speed is distance over time, it means that the time taken has to be different for both people.
On the bus, time is
slower than outside the bus. That seems weird right? But if you follow our experiment, and accept that light is always travelling at c, it has to be right, doesn't it?
So how does this all relate to time travel?
Buses aren't going to help you travel time. But, on the larger scale, the differences can be huge. If you got on a spaceship and crank it up to 99% of c and start flying around the earth, what do you observe? For the people on the space ship, the distance the light travels is 1m. If people on earth had a super good telescope and could measure the beam of light, it would travel 500 times that distance! (this isn't necessarily the right number, but thereabouts). So what does that mean, if the speed is measured to be the same for both observers (it has to be remember?). It means that
time on earth is travelling 500x quicker!. So after a year, when the astronauts make their return, 500 years have passed on earth!
So this explains how to travel into the future, theoretically.
Also theoretically, to travel into the past, one would have to exceed the speed of light, thus going backwards. It's thought to be physically impossible though, so sadly no Back to the Future!