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Should we stop time?

We spend it, waste it and then wish that we had more of it. In Brazil, there’s a tribe that doesn’t believe in it – and many physicists feel the same way. So why is time such a contentious concept – and could we put an end to it all together?

Michael Brooks
Tuesday 01 July 2014 11:09 BST
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Time on his hands: silent comedian Harold Lloyd grasps the hands of a skyscraper’s clock in his film ‘Safety Last’ from 1923
Time on his hands: silent comedian Harold Lloyd grasps the hands of a skyscraper’s clock in his film ‘Safety Last’ from 1923 (Rex)

When it comes to time, your brain is making a fool of you.

Everyone has their own story of when time ground to a halt, for instance. Mine was when a car knocked me from my bicycle. I was 12 years old. I remember flying through the air after the impact, and thinking how strange it was to be able to think so clearly while airborne. But that's almost certainly a false memory. In dramatic moments, time doesn't really slow to the point where you can pay attention to details. We know this because David Eagleman, an associate professor of neuroscience, and Chess Stetson, one of his postgraduates, once persuaded a group of people to throw themselves off a tower from a height of 46m (151ft).

The tower was at the Zero Gravity amusement park in Dallas, Texas, but the experience was clearly far from amusing. There's a clue in the title of the research paper they published afterwards: Does Time Really Slow Down During a Frightening Event? Eagleman said it was the scariest thing he had ever done.

During their freefall, the volunteers read out any numbers they could see on a "perceptual chronometer" attached to their wrists. This device was a square array of 64 red LED lights. A display of the number in LED lights – red on black – was alternated with the illumination pattern inverted: the same number was then displayed black on red. The human eye can see the difference if the alternation happens slowly enough, but at a sharp threshold in speed the two become superimposed and the display looks as if all the lights are on.

If time really does slow down and perception is heightened when you are in a frightening, life-threatening situation, the researchers reasoned, the volunteers should be able to see the numbers. First, they tested the threshold speed at which the volunteers could see the flickering number. Then they gave them a test jump and asked them to estimate how long the fall lasted. With a safety net installed 15m above the ground, the fall took 2.49 seconds, but the participants all overestimated their fall time by roughly one third. Time, it seems, really was slowing down inside their heads.

Then the researchers made them jump again, this time wearing perceptual chronometers set to one-third above their threshold flicker speed. If time really was slowing down, they should be able to see a number as they fell. Eagleman and Stetson ended up with only 19 data points, because one volunteer kept her eyes closed all the way down. But it made no difference: none of the fallers saw a number. There is no evidence to support the idea that time ever runs in slow motion.

The truth is, time doesn't actually run at all.The whole thing is an illusion.

Ticking off: most of those at the cutting edge of physics don’t believe in the notion of time and think it should be banished altogether (Alamy)

At the cutting edge of physics, very few people still believe in the notion of time. In 2008, the Foundational Questions Institute, a kind of think-tank for physicists, held an essay competition on the nature of time. Some of the world's leading researchers entered and laid out their stalls for how we should view time. Carlo Rovelli, of the University of Marseille, suggested that if we want to unite quantum theory and relativity – the ultimate goal of theoretical physics – "we must forget the notion of time altogether".

Fotini Markopoulou Kalamara, of Ontario's Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics wrote that we would have to ditch the notion that physical space is real if we want to save time (she believes that the trade is worth it). The winner of the competition, Julian Barbour, of Oxford, took no prisoners. "Unlike the emperor dressed in nothing, time is nothing dressed in clothes," he said. "Time," he concluded, "should be banished."

We already know that the universe has no truck with time. In his Principia Mathematica, Isaac Newton wrote that, "Absolute, true, and mathematical time, of itself, and from its own nature, flows equably without relation to anything external... All motions may be accelerated and retarded, but the flowing of absolute time is not liable to any change."

But Newton was wrong, as Einstein proved in his special theory of relativity. We now know – and have shown in experiments – that the passage of time is different for people who are moving in different ways through the universe. That means it is possible for two people to move relative to each other in such a way that they can both see two events but cannot agree on which one of them happened first. Another casualty is the concept of a universal "now": one person's present moment is in another person's past, depending on how they are moving relative to one another.

Quantum physics, our most successfully proven scientific theory, does not consider time as something worth even including as a measurable phenomenon. We already had hints – such as the fact that photons, the quantum particles of light, don't experience time. But last year, Viennese researchers showed that quantum particles can simultaneously exist at two separate moments at once.

Imagine Einstein and Newton are bound only by the laws of quantum theory. The theory says that it is possible for Einstein to walk into a room and see a message that Newton has left for him. He erases the message, then writes a reply. As Einstein finishes, Newton comes into the room to write the original message. It's what's known as a superposition: two seemingly separate possibilities both occurring at once.

In this case, Einstein was in the room before Newton and Newton was in the room before Einstein. It is, as sometimes happens with relativity, impossible to say who came into the room first. Why? Almost certainly because time isn't a fundamental component of the universe.

There is no way to make this palatable; our common sense tells you that it can't be true. However, common sense is not a useful guide to reality. And if the physicists have taken away our time, at least they are helping to explain why we think it's still there.

In 1967, two renowned physicists, Bryce DeWitt and John Wheeler, found a way to bring quantum theory and relativity together to create an ultimate theory of reality. You won't be surprised to hear that the scheme involved ditching the notion of time. However, in October last year, a group of Italian researchers made an intriguing breakthrough. They showed that those inside DeWitt and Wheeler's universe would still sense time passing. They created a physical system involving two photons and demonstrated that the photons' properties were static when viewed from outside the system, but changed when viewed from within. The explanation comes from the "observer effect", where quantum properties of particles are affected by being measured.

Circling back to our everyday lives, it's clear that Barbour's idea of banishing time could never work. We can't even bring ourselves to redefine time in modern terms. While we have decimalised almost every description of the physical world, we still work with primitive measures of time. The Babylonians knew of seven planets, which is why we have seven days in a week. There are 12 hours in each day and each night because they gave one hour to each sign of the zodiac. We have 60 minutes in an hour because they thought 60 an auspicious number.

There are other ways of doing it. Thousands of years ago, China ran on decimal time; the Chinese foolishly gave it up when Jesuit astronomers brought them the European system. Decimal time made a brief reappearance after the 1789 French revolution. Pierre-Simon Laplace, the mathematician, even had a watch that gave decimal time, and he wrote his celebrated Treatise on Celestial Mechanics using decimal time units.

In the end, though, the Babylonians prevailed – largely because of economics. Nations that built their wealth on an ability to navigate the oceans for trade were loath to give up their sextants, theodolites, charts and tables – all configured for the Babylonian system. These days that obstacle has gone; GPS uses atomic time, which is based on the frequency of radiation emitted by caesium-133 atoms. However, we use that atomic standard to define the second, not to change it.

The Greenwich Meridian which sits at the centre of our system of time zones (Alamy)

Modern life, it seems, won't allow us to mess with time: it's just too precious to us. It is perhaps telling that only the most untouched of remote tribes has the most scientifically accurate relationship with time. The Uru-Eu-Wau-Wau people of Brazil can talk in terms of one event happening before or after another, but they have no abstract concept of time as something separate, as a background in which things happen. Their language has no word for time as a stand-alone idea. They have no word for month or year.

It's impossible to imagine living like that – in our culture, notions of the passage of time are sacrosanct. That is why we might see an international incident over time next year.

The crisis is coming because, thanks to tidal forces from the sun and moon, the Earth's spin is slowing down. As a consequence, the days – defined as one full rotation of the planet – are getting longer. We have been compensating for this since the 1970s by adding a "leap second" every now and then, but there is a rumbling against this. Technology companies who have to insert the leap second into their computers' software on an ad-hoc basis complain that it's a pain, and it sometimes goes wrong and makes computer systems fall over.

The governments of most countries have agreed that this means we should stop inserting leap seconds. But Britain, along with a couple of other nations, is standing in the way.

The UK's Science minister, David Willetts, thinks it would be foolish to sever our cultural connection between the sun and our clocks just because it gives computer programmers an occasional headache. Not that the effect of ditching the leap second is going to be terribly noticeable for a good while yet: if we do stop inserting it, it will take 600 years before the sun is at its highest point at 12.30, rather than noon. Nonetheless, Willetts is exercised enough about the issue to have commissioned a public consultation to find out if we all agree with him before he (or his successor) has to participate in an international vote on the matter in 2015.

If the vote goes against the technology community's desire to abandon the leap second, it's always possible that the companies will just redefine time for themselves. There's no reason why they couldn't implement a proprietary time-stamp on their devices and software; before too long, some of us might be running our lives on Google Time. Perhaps that will be the moment we accept that time really is the ultimate delusion. µ

'At The Edge of Uncertainty: 11 Discoveries Taking Science By Surprise', by Michael Brooks (Profile, £12.99), is out tomorrow

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