Why Would A Real Wormhole Be A Total Nightmare?
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It should have been a simple test.
The wormhole stretched from the moon's
orbit to an empty patch of space near
Neptune, where a welcome party was
already being arranged. It had taken
huge effort and resources to reach down
into the quantum foam and pluck a
wormhole from those depths, but general
relativity had predicted their
existence. And now here it was. With
this technology, humanity could finally
achieve the dream of interstellar
travel. And so, after the last
calibrations and tweaks, the ship and
its brave crew entered the wormhole's
throat, passing easily through the
sphere of the entrance. Onlookers could
see the retreating vessel gradually
shrinking away as it appeared to move
effortlessly to its destination, 4 12
billion km away. At the other end, the
reception party could see the ship
approaching, slowly getting larger as
the minutes ticked by. The test probe
had taken roughly 30 minutes to traverse
the distance, and the manned vessel
seemed to be on a similar track.
[Music]
But then,
there were murmurss of concern as the
ship appeared to slow down, then stall.
It looked frozen in place.
30 minutes passed and the ship did not
emerge.
Days passed, then weeks, then months.
With time, sensitive telescopes at
either end were able to determine that
the ship was still in motion, but almost
imperceptibly slowly.
Debates raged about what to do. Send a
rescue party? Turn off the wormhole
generator? Every option seemed to end in
tragedy with the fragile balance of
exotic forces maintaining the stability
of the wormhole thrown into
disequilibrium, tearing the ship and its
crew to pieces. The only safe option was
to wait.
And so they waited.
[Music]
500 years passed before what was left of
the ship finally emerged from the open
end of the wormhole. It was still
intact, but barely functioning. A broken
husk after years of exposure to the
harsh conditions within. The crew was
long dead, their remains still strapped
into the command chairs.
Finally, the wormhole was shut down.
Clearly, they had miscalculated. The
predictions of general relativity were
evidently not enough. They thought they
had solved every corner of the complex
intersection of gravity and quantum
mechanics, accounted for every possible
interaction.
But something simply hadn't worked.
Humanity looked out at the distant stars
and never felt more alone.
Wormholes are complicated.
They appear in the equations of general
relativity and the idea of them is
almost as old as the theory itself. But
unfortunately for those test pilots
heading to Neptune, relativity is just a
machine that tells us how gravity works
in various scenarios, regardless of
whether or not the universe actually
allows those scenarios.
And so what would it take to build a
wormhole? Which mechanisms allow for
wormholes? and which forbid them? And
would they transport us to the
destinations of our dreams across the
stars? Or to an early death.
[Music]
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Critics called it confusing, dense, and
absurd. But to Edgar Alan Poe, it was
his greatest work yet.
It was 1848, just one year before his
mysterious death. Having struggled as a
professional writer throughout much of
his life, his recent success from The
Raven had been a welcome financial
reprieve, which he took advantage of to
compose what he viewed as his
masterpiece, what he called the one
great purpose in my literary life.
Its title was Eureka.
The text is expansive, and today little
attention is paid to it, especially
compared to his much more famous poems.
But some statements in its tangled mass
still stand out as oddly precient. For
about 2thirds of the way through the
text, in the middle of a section where
Po discusses the expanses of
interstellar space, he declares almost
out of nowhere that space and duration
are one.
In Po's eyes, space and time were the
same.
Working nearly a century later, Albert
Einstein had no idea that in some sense
he was recapitulating the thoughts of a
long deadad New England poet. But that
is exactly what he ended up doing.
It was 1905, a year which would become
known as Einstein's annis morabilis, a
year of miracles. In that single year,
Einstein published five papers, each one
with huge implications for our reality.
And one of those papers, perhaps his
most consequential, concerned the
relationship between movement and
energy. It's in this paper that Einstein
formulated his special theory of
relativity, which showed that the
measurements of length and time were
relative to the observer. But Einstein's
former teacher, Herman Minkovsky,
thought that he hadn't gone far enough.
And so, shortly after, Minkovsky offered
an intuitive geometric formulation of
Einstein's work, presenting the universe
as a four-dimensional object. Unlike
Po's ideas, however, this new spacetime
did not mean that space and time were
identical. Instead, they were different
facets of a single unified entity. But
Einstein would learn from his teacher
once more and quickly adopted this new
idea, using it to make one more gigantic
leap in human imagination.
In 1915, Einstein unleashed into the
unsuspecting world a general theory of
relativity.
[Music]
In the language of general relativity,
spacetime isn't static. It responds to
the presence of matter and energy. The
unified fabric of spacetime bends and
warps due to matter's influence. And in
return, that bending of spacetime
influences the motion of matter. Indeed,
years later, famed physicist John
Wheeler would sum it all up with the
simple phrase, "Matter tells space how
to curve, and space tells matter how to
move."
And it's happening all around you and
within you right now.
Ripples of gravity, known as
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