Difference between revisions of "Noron theory"

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[[Image:retarded_time.svg|thumb||200px|An illustration of retarded time. Photons are labeled with their earth departure time. At 8:00AM on earth, photons that have departed at 7:56AM arrive at the satellite. Hence, the retarded time is four minutes.]]
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[[Image:Noron theory2.png|thumb|500px|An illustration of the Noron theory. Whilst photons from the year 2000AD are just departing earth, photons from the year 200AD are just arriving back. The retarded time is 1800 years.]]
  
 
The '''Noron theory''' suggests a theoretical means in which to 'travel' to the past using the concept of [[retarded time]]. It was proposed in 2008 by Professor Richard Hills<ref>[http://www.mrao.cam.ac.uk/people/rhills.html Astrophysics Group members - R Hills<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> of Cambridge University, in honour of the late Jayesh Noron (a close friend of Hills).
 
The '''Noron theory''' suggests a theoretical means in which to 'travel' to the past using the concept of [[retarded time]]. It was proposed in 2008 by Professor Richard Hills<ref>[http://www.mrao.cam.ac.uk/people/rhills.html Astrophysics Group members - R Hills<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> of Cambridge University, in honour of the late Jayesh Noron (a close friend of Hills).
  
Under the assumption of linear light travel, the time delay between photon emission and observance ([[retarded time]]) allows for one situated sufficiently distant from earth to witness events on earth that have transpired in the past, provided extremely large telescopes are used<ref>Charles Seife, ''Alpha and Omega: The Search for the Beginning and End of the Universe'', Penguin 2004.</ref>. However, this assumption prevents a space-travelling observer from witnessing events further back in time from earth departure, as the observer would have to travel faster than the speed of light to catch up to the photons that have been reflected from earth in the past. This discrepancy is called the Noron Paradox.
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[[Image:Noron theory2.png|thumb||500px|An illustration of the Noron theory. Whilst photons from the year 2000AD are just departing earth, photons from the year 200AD are just arriving back. The retarded time is 1800 years.]]
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==Retarded time==
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The concept of [[retarded time]] simply implies that light takes time to travel; that is, light does not travel instantaneously. The retarded time is the time delay from when a light particle (photon) leaves its source, to when it arrives at its destination. Due to the fact that light travels at extremely high velocities, this delay is typically unnoticable in small scale contexts. For example, the time delay from when one turns on a lightbulb to when the photons from that lightbulb reach the observer's eyes is of the order of a billionth of a second. However, on much larger scales (such as between the sun and the earth), the time delay is much more noticable - in the example just mentioned, the retarded time is approximately eight minutes.  
  
The Noron theory solves the Noron Paradox with modern theories on the curvature of the universe<ref>Probing for dynamics of dark energy and curvature of universe with latest cosmological observations Gong-Bo Zhao (Inst. of High Energy Phys., Chinese Acad. of Sci., Beijing, China); Jun-Qing Xia; Hong Li; Tao, C.; Virey, J.-M.; Zong-Hong Zhu; Xinmin Zhang Source: Physics Letters B, v 648, n 1, 26 April 2007, p 8-13</ref>, stating that this curvature is sufficient to refract earth-originating photons back to earth. This suggests that earth's entire history could be witnessed from earth using high-powered telescopes.
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One may capitalise on the concept of retarded time to witness events that have happened in the past, simply by traveling far away from the source of the photons. The further one travels away from the source, the further back in time they will be able to see, provided they use extremely large and powerful telescopes. For instance, someone who is the sun's distance away from the earth will be able to witness events on the earth that transpired eight minutes ago. <ref>Charles Seife, ''Alpha and Omega: The Search for the Beginning and End of the Universe'', Penguin 2004.</ref>.  
  
The Noron theory has not yet broken into mainstream astrophysics and is widely unheard of, as Hills was not able to successfully publish his theory.  
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[[Image:retarded_time.svg|thumb||200px|An illustration of retarded time. At 8:00AM on earth, photons that have departed at 7:56AM arrive at the satellite. The retarded time is thus four minutes.]]
  
== References ==
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== Noron Paradox ==
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There is a problem, however, if the observer wishes to witness events further back in time from their earth departure. One may think of the light reflected off earth as layers of photons emanating from earth at the speed of light. If one wishes to witness a layer of light from the past, it would require them to travel through space faster than the speed of light to catch up to that layer. Due to the fact that it is impossible to travel faster than the speed of light (unless you utilise wormhole transportation), the layers of light from the earth's past are now beyond human reach. This discrepancy is called the Noron Paradox.
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== Universe curvature ==
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The Noron theory solves the Noron Paradox with modern theories on the curvature of the universe<ref>Probing for dynamics of dark energy and curvature of universe with latest cosmological observations Gong-Bo Zhao (Inst. of High Energy Phys., Chinese Acad. of Sci., Beijing, China); Jun-Qing Xia; Hong Li; Tao, C.; Virey, J.-M.; Zong-Hong Zhu; Xinmin Zhang Source: Physics Letters B, v 648, n 1, 26 April 2007, p 8-13</ref>. The Noron theory suggests that the curvature of the universe is sufficient to eventually refract earth-originating photons back to earth. This means that events that have transpired in earth's past could be witnessed ''from'' earth, using high-powered telescopes. However, the radius of curvature of the universe will determine how far back in time one will be able to 'see.'
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The Noron theory has not penetrated mainstream astrophysics and is not well known, as Hills is continuing research on the Noron theory and has not yet published it.
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==References==
  
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
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==External Links==
  
 
[[Category:Time travel]]
 
[[Category:Time travel]]
  
 
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Revision as of 23:28, 30 July 2009

File:Noron theory2.png
An illustration of the Noron theory. Whilst photons from the year 2000AD are just departing earth, photons from the year 200AD are just arriving back. The retarded time is 1800 years.

The Noron theory suggests a theoretical means in which to 'travel' to the past using the concept of retarded time. It was proposed in 2008 by Professor Richard Hills<ref>Astrophysics Group members - R Hills</ref> of Cambridge University, in honour of the late Jayesh Noron (a close friend of Hills).



Retarded time

The concept of retarded time simply implies that light takes time to travel; that is, light does not travel instantaneously. The retarded time is the time delay from when a light particle (photon) leaves its source, to when it arrives at its destination. Due to the fact that light travels at extremely high velocities, this delay is typically unnoticable in small scale contexts. For example, the time delay from when one turns on a lightbulb to when the photons from that lightbulb reach the observer's eyes is of the order of a billionth of a second. However, on much larger scales (such as between the sun and the earth), the time delay is much more noticable - in the example just mentioned, the retarded time is approximately eight minutes.

One may capitalise on the concept of retarded time to witness events that have happened in the past, simply by traveling far away from the source of the photons. The further one travels away from the source, the further back in time they will be able to see, provided they use extremely large and powerful telescopes. For instance, someone who is the sun's distance away from the earth will be able to witness events on the earth that transpired eight minutes ago. <ref>Charles Seife, Alpha and Omega: The Search for the Beginning and End of the Universe, Penguin 2004.</ref>.

File:Retarded time.svg
An illustration of retarded time. At 8:00AM on earth, photons that have departed at 7:56AM arrive at the satellite. The retarded time is thus four minutes.

Noron Paradox

There is a problem, however, if the observer wishes to witness events further back in time from their earth departure. One may think of the light reflected off earth as layers of photons emanating from earth at the speed of light. If one wishes to witness a layer of light from the past, it would require them to travel through space faster than the speed of light to catch up to that layer. Due to the fact that it is impossible to travel faster than the speed of light (unless you utilise wormhole transportation), the layers of light from the earth's past are now beyond human reach. This discrepancy is called the Noron Paradox.

Universe curvature

The Noron theory solves the Noron Paradox with modern theories on the curvature of the universe<ref>Probing for dynamics of dark energy and curvature of universe with latest cosmological observations Gong-Bo Zhao (Inst. of High Energy Phys., Chinese Acad. of Sci., Beijing, China); Jun-Qing Xia; Hong Li; Tao, C.; Virey, J.-M.; Zong-Hong Zhu; Xinmin Zhang Source: Physics Letters B, v 648, n 1, 26 April 2007, p 8-13</ref>. The Noron theory suggests that the curvature of the universe is sufficient to eventually refract earth-originating photons back to earth. This means that events that have transpired in earth's past could be witnessed from earth, using high-powered telescopes. However, the radius of curvature of the universe will determine how far back in time one will be able to 'see.'

The Noron theory has not penetrated mainstream astrophysics and is not well known, as Hills is continuing research on the Noron theory and has not yet published it.

References

<references/>

External Links

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