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Wed, 26 Sep 2007

Time Math

Posted to Technology category
Been working on my time machine late at night, between 3 and 5 am. Hiding it from my wife.. Figured I needed to put some math into it.

So assuming I figure out how to move an object, like my van, (if I am traveling in time it would be convenient to have a vehicle to drive around, and the van should blend in, in most time eras). The following math seems to apply.

So if I have the van sitting in my driveway, and move it backwards in time say 1 hour. And the earth moves at about 1000 miles an hour, would this also place my van 1000 east of Denver, probably near St. Louis? Need to figure out if time travel is relevant to the current location or if it's fixed in space, meaning not only do I need to figure out how to move in time, but also in space.

In my above question, I assumed I only needed to worry about the earths rotation, and not it's movement around the sun. which is 67,000 miles per hour, so not only am I 1000 east of Denver, I'm also 67,000 miles out in space, which I'll have to modify the van for, not really speced for space, will need more duct tape.

Of course, now I'm assuming I don't need to account for the solar system's movement, 559,224 miles per hour, which I probably would. So accounting for that, if I traveled back in time 1 hour, I would be 1000 miles to the east, 67,000 miles behind the earth and 559,224 miles away from our solar system. Which is too far for my Van to drive back to in my lifetime.

So this equation should be valid assuming we don't worry about how fast our galaxy is moving inside the universe. To make it easier, I'm flattening the universe to two dimensions, odd, since I'm trying to figure out four.

x = 627224t
x = distance from starting location
t = time traveled in hours (negative for going back, positive for forward)
627224= g(speed the sun is moving from our galactic center)+e(earths speed around the sun)+p(earths rotation)


At least I can pinpoint fairly crudely where I think an object moving thru time would end up. One must also be careful to record the starting location.

Scarey, thing is if you go forward in time, it's possible the solar system will crash into you, which will probably hurt.

Posted at: 12:01 pm

3 comments

Comments

Re: Time Math
Shane wrote on Thu, 27 Sep 2007 09:19

You don't even have a flux capacitor yet, you don't need to be worrying about where you'll end up.

Reply

Re: Time Math
Shawn wrote on Thu, 27 Sep 2007 12:30

I disagree, I think understanding where you'll end up is more important than discovering the means of transportation.

Thats why no one has "invented" time travel yet. Everyone that has, is floating hundreds of thousands of miles away from us in space.

Reply

Re: Time Math
Shane wrote on Thu, 27 Sep 2007 23:45

But you don't even know if that would even matter. Maybe time travel requires that you be in space moving really fast, or that it's possible to input coordinates. There are too many theories on how to time travel, so you should find out which one's right before you work out the problems of a possible method. I hope that makes sense.

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