Why does time require matter ?

In summary: This seems to suggest that even if the universe were to go through a 'big crunch' where all the matter is annihilated, time would still continue to pass as the false vacuum would continue to expand.
  • #141
petm1 said:
The simple answer is matter and it's associated energy, of which we are all a part, are what we count as time. The space we "see" is the difference between the emission and reception of a photon upon reception in the present or just another duration.

Uh ... ?
 
Space news on Phys.org
  • #142
petm1 said:
The simple answer is matter and it's associated energy, of which we are all a part, are what we count as time. The space we "see" is the difference between the emission and reception of a photon upon reception in the present or just another duration.

i iz stu-pid. wut yu say?
 
  • #143
If you believe in a single photon then the end of a photon's life or the end of a photons duration as a photon is what we see as space. Space/time is measured one photon at a time isn't it.
 
  • #144
petm1 said:
If you believe in a single photon then the end of a photon's life or the end of a photons duration as a photon is what we see as space. Space/time is measured one photon at a time isn't it.

Sounds like nonsense to me.
 
  • #145
I think we have expressed the mathematical relationship that links the time to matter. according to general relativity we can write rapidly:
The equivalence principle gives us the expression between the time coordinate and the proper time measured in the entourage of the mass distribution.
dτ=gttc2dt2; dτ is the proper time.
gtt=(1-GM/c2r);
if gtt=0 then the proper time is zero. it happens at the Schwarzschild radius.
I think this expression shows that our time vanishes at this limit. This time is what we measure since the big bang. before the big bang it was another time that has nothing to do with matter. It is just a model.
 
  • #146
Think of emission as the cause and reception the effect of EMR, GPS works because of this relationship, and all I can see is one end of this duration I think of as a photon.
 
  • #147
So as mass alters space and time, then the space between two SMBH in a death dance. would weaken the space-time barrier?
 
  • #148
Grimstone said:
So as mass alters space and time, then the space between two SMBH in a death dance. would weaken the space-time barrier?
Um, there's no such thing as a space-time barrier. The space around supermassive black holes gets curved in interesting ways, though. Curiously enough, it is the smaller black holes that have more curvature around them, not the larger ones.
 
  • #149
The whole thing about matter degrading from a high entropy to a low entropy helps me understand this further but then you start getting into "is it the start or the begining?" Time would then cease to exist with no lower form of decay without some catalyst to change the matter from its simplest state of existence back into a more complex form... If there is no comparison for degradation does it exist...? ie If things were all degrading at the same rate (including the observer) there would be no change comparitively to observe... Ouch
 
  • #150
What are you going to use as a clock, our anchor to the past, if not matter? How about an observer made out of anything other than the matter anchoring their consciousnesses in the present? The duration of matter and its changes in space-time is how we measure existence, the count of a clock is what keeps it all relative. Does time require matter I would think not but does matter require time, yes. :smile:
 
  • #151
phasl001 said:
Yet a theory remains unproven even if it has facts to back it up, therefor it is a highly scientific opinion, because anyone might think otherwise. For example, global warming, many believe that it is cause by increased carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere. It is fact that carbon dioxide levels have risen and it is also fact that the Earth is warmer than it really is. Regardless of the theory, it remains unproven and only a matter of opinion on what exactly is warming the earth. Sorry to go off topic, but I believe you are wrong. Which is my opinion :)

-Phil
You tell only a part of the story,
its a common mistake to believe a scientific theory to be ONLY a matter of opinion:

Theories can only be disproven, but we try honestly to disprove theories
and prefer to use a well tested non-disproved-theory instead of a disproved or untested one!
 
Last edited:
  • #152
I will break the discussion here and ask sth new.
1.Suppose there is emptiness, not even vaccum. So no vacuum energy and so forth.
Is there time?.
2. Out of nowhere suddenly a matter pops up.
Does it change or remain till eternity? Now, is there time?

Can this be answered?

And completely unrelated.

3. And, further than that, Do we even know what causes time/change to ask why its arrow is forward?

why it is in forward direction.
 
  • #153
I will speculate: Because they are definable in terms of each other.
 
  • #154
My humble opinion is that time was invented by us so our farmers knew when it was safe to plant crops without danger of frost. Calendars and so forth.
If we had not invented time then how could we have measured the speed of light?(I'm trying to inject some humor here, folks. Don't take me too seriously.)
 
  • #155
Don't we use sound to measure sound, light to measure light, distance to measure distances and motion to measure motions? But time? We use motion to measure time,such as one rotation of the earth, we call a day, one day divided by 24 we call an hour etc...
Without movement time ceased to exist as it were.
An universe without movement is possible as long as it "jump" from one state to the other. In such an universe would time exist?
It seems matter is not so much needed as motion is for time to be detectable by a human or a machine and so have an existence.
 
  • #156
C. Bernard said:
Don't we use sound to measure sound, light to measure light, distance to measure distances and motion to measure motions?
No. Why would you think this?
 
  • #157
C. Bernard said:
It seems matter is not so much needed as motion is for time to be detectable by a human or a machine and so have an existence.

And what motion do you think is possible without matter? Motion of WHAT?
 
  • #158
dpa said:
I will break the discussion here and ask sth new.
1.Suppose there is emptiness, not even vaccum. So no vacuum energy and so forth.
Is there time?.
2. Out of nowhere suddenly a matter pops up.
Does it change or remain till eternity? Now, is there time?

Can this be answered?

And completely unrelated.

3. And, further than that, Do we even know what causes time/change to ask why its arrow is forward?

why it is in forward direction.

1. If you define time as thermal evolution, then technically no, there would be nothing to base it on. But, it is impossible to find an area of spacetime that is completely empty, as the uncertainty principle says there always must be some energy, even if it is just a very small amount. So such a situation would never occur.

2. Like I said, there can never be a total vacuum, so that doesn't need to be addressed it simply can't happen.

3. Yes, it appears that time seems to flow "forward" because of entropy. Entropy is the measure of how discorded a particular system is, for example, gas has a far higher entropy than a solid, it's molecules are very jumbled up. The second law of thermodynamics states that entropy will always increase overall. So, if you leave an ice cube out, it will eventually melt into water, then gas, it's more disordered states. So seeing something like a glass coming together, or vapor condensing into an ice cube, doesn't happen because that would be a reduction of entropy.

But, it's possible for entropy to decrease in small flukes, as long as it is compensated for by something else's entropy increasing by a larger amount (such as energy consumption by humans. Your body stores things into more ordered states, but in the process releases energy, so the overall entropy still increases.). So you could see something like an un-shattering glass, but the odds are so low, you probably wouldn't see anything like that if you kept tabs on the universe since the big bang.
 
  • #159
To Chalnoth: i was referring to the fact that we use intrinsic properties of things to measure them.
For exemple a meter to measure distance. It seems time has no intrinsic properties which can be used to either measure it or qualify it.


To Phinds: yes you are rigth,matter is needed for motion, but i think motion is needed to even have the idea of time,(which may or may not exist).
 
  • #160
C. Bernard said:
To Phinds: yes you are rigth,matter is needed for motion, but i think motion is needed to even have the idea of time,(which may or may not exist).

I beg to differ.

Matter did not even condense out of energy until between 3 and 20 minutes after T=0. There was both time and movement - and plenty of both - prior to that.
 
  • #161
C. Bernard said:
To Chalnoth: i was referring to the fact that we use intrinsic properties of things to measure them.
For exemple a meter to measure distance. It seems time has no intrinsic properties which can be used to either measure it or qualify it.
Huh? There is nothing intrinsic about a meter. A meter is simply a convenient standard with which we can compare measurements. In fact, the meter is defined today in terms of time.

A second is defined as the amount of time passed to count some number of oscillations of a particular atomic clock. The speed of light is then defined as being a specific ratio of meters to seconds. The meter is defined in terms of the two.

So, for example, when we build an experiment to measure how fast light beams propagate, we are really measuring our convention for the meter.
 
  • #162
phinds said:
I have read in serveral posts here that the concept of time in a total void is meaningless. That is, many scadzillions of years from now, assuming the expansion continues and black holes evaporate, and all goes REALLY dark (yes, I'm talking about a LONG time), the concept is that time loses its meaning because there's no way to measure it.

This really is perhaps one of those silly semantic arguments that I usually do not care for but this one is bugging me for some reason.

I GET completely the fact that you can't MEASURE time without matter but the concept that time just stops passing doesn't make sense to me. It is a somewhat pointless distinction, since even if time goes on, nothing HAPPENS. It's just the concept that "time stops" that bothers me and that SEEMS to be what I'm hearing from some of the threads here.

I'd appreciate any comments anyone has on this? Do you think time doesn't exist if you can't measure it because there's nothing to make clocks out of (and even no subatomic interactions to measure your ticks by) ?

Thanks,

Paul

By the way, I put this in cosmology since I can't think where ELSE to put it ... if a mod wants to move it, fine by me.


Can we step back and look at the big picture for a moment?


First, to expand on what Chronos posted #104
"Time and space are thought to be a consequence of gravity. Theoretically, without gravity, there would be no time or space -
re: http://www.astronomycafe.net/gravity/gravity.html

"Perhaps the most unusual thing about gravity we know about is that, unlike the other forces of nature, gravity is intimately related to space and time. In fact, space and time are viewed by physicists, and the mathematics of relativity theory, as qualities of the gravitational field of the cosmos that have no independent existence. Gravity does not exist like the frosting on a cake, embedded in some larger arena of space and time. Instead, the 'frosting' is everything, and matter is embedded and intimately and indivisibly connected to it. If you could turn off gravity, it is mathematically predicted that space and time would also vanish!""




IF the universe ever stops expanding - THEN shouldn't gravity begin to re-gather all of the lifeless mass into a single point again?

Accordingly - wouldn't time continue to correspond to events?
 
  • #163
BTW - sorry to post on an old thread - saw it on FB.
 
  • #164
enosis_ said:
IF the universe ever stops expanding - THEN shouldn't gravity begin to re-gather all of the lifeless mass into a single point again?

There is no reason to believe that this can happen. That is, there is nothing to suggest that the universe is going to collapse.

Also, your "single point" concept is nonsense. The original universe was a dense hot plasma of unknown size but no reputable cosmologist believes it was a point. If might even have been infinite.
 
  • #165
phinds said:
There is no reason to believe that this can happen. That is, there is nothing to suggest that the universe is going to collapse.

Also, your "single point" concept is nonsense. The original universe was a dense hot plasma of unknown size but no reputable cosmologist believes it was a point. If might even have been infinite.

Ok - no single point at big bang.

If there is no longer expansion, why wouldn't gravity re-gather mass - somewhere/anywhere? Why would everything stop - wouldn't gravity still exist somewhere?
 
  • #166
enosis_ said:
Ok - no single point at big bang.

If there is no longer expansion, why wouldn't gravity re-gather mass - somewhere/anywhere? Why would everything stop - wouldn't gravity still exist somewhere?

I guess what I should have said explicitly was, there is no reason to believe that expansion will stop. In fact, there is every reason to believe that it will continue and will continue to accelerate.

This means that your question is equivalent to saying "if the laws of physics stopped applying, what would the laws of physics say about <put in anything you like>?"
 
  • #167
I post a few papers here because they gives some additional perspectives I did not see in this thread...
that gravity can be interpreted as a holographic phenomena of degrees of freedom, entropy, temperature...for an expanding cosmological horizon...

The following paper was referenced in a previous discussion in these forums:
[I did not record the ARXIV link]

Emergent perspective of Gravity and Dark Energy
T. Padmanabhan


Decades of research have shown that one can associate notions of temperature and
entropy with any null surface in a spacetime which blocks information from certain class
of observers….. Any observer in a spacetime who perceives a null surface as a horizon will attribute to it a temperature...Well known examples of such null surfaces are black hole horizon and cosmological event horizon in the de Sitter spacetime…….

my own note: Thus [by inserting a few hbars on each side of] a gravitational equation, the gravitational field equation, evaluated on the horizon now becomes a thermodynamic [expression… allowing us to read off the expressions for entropy and energy.


If Chronos' post [was it #124?edit: #104 ] is right, gravity,hence time appear eternal...

Thermodynamics of Spacetime:
The Einstein Equation of State
Ted Jacobson 1995
http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9504004

Summary:
In thermodynamics, heat is energy that flows between degrees of freedom that are not macroscopically observable. In spacetime dynamics, we shall define heat as energy that flows across a causal horizon. it is not necessary that the horizon be a black hole event horizon. It can be simply the boundary of the past… a null hypersurface Can derive the Einstein equation from the proportionality of entropy and [boundary] horizon area together with the fundamental relation _Q = TdS…This thermodynamic equilibrium relationship applies only when a system is in “equilibrium”, not where the horizon is expanding, contracting, or shearing. In the case of gravity, we chose our systems to be defined by local Rindler horizons, which are instantaneously stationary, in order to have systems in local equilibrium. Classical General Relativity know that [the] horizon area would turn out to be a form of entropy, and that surface gravity is a temperature...


Our universe, of course, is not pure de Sitter but is evolving towards an asymptotically de Sitter phase. It is therefore natural to think of the current accelerated expansion
of the universe as an evolution towards holographic equipartition…… we can describe the evolution of the accelerating universe entirely in terms of the concept of holographic equipartition.

so it appears in this sense entropy never goes to zero...meaning neither does gravity nor time.

I have no idea what all this means! Time for football.
 
  • #168
phinds said:
I guess what I should have said explicitly was, there is no reason to believe that expansion will stop. In fact, there is every reason to believe that it will continue and will continue to accelerate.
"

... I'm quite weary when it comes to eternity on both ends due to the fact that it's not happening locally. Considering energy as a process of phase transformation and conversion at which each phase has it's unique behavior. On the side-note. I also agree that expansion is what we can come up 'directly' from the data and for obvious reasons. But I believe that at one some state in time that behavior(expansion) will be converted to a different behavior(?) in a manner of phase transition. Fortunately, When i tried to search that idea. I've stumble upon an article on 'phase transition' - cp-3 origins program. They're suggesting prior to their computations (I have no access) that some state of collapse IS happening (not the same as crunch). I'll remain skeptic on eternal inflation. I guess i have a problem with infinity. I don't know. It's just me.^^

http://sdu.dk/en/om_sdu/fakulteterne/naturvidenskab/nyheder/2013_12_12_collapsing_universe
 
Last edited:
  • #169
julcab12 said:
... I'm quite weary when it comes to eternity on both ends due to the fact that it's not happening locally. Considering energy as a process of phase transformation and conversion at which each phase has it's unique behavior. On the side-note. I also agree that expansion is what we can come up 'directly' from the data and for obvious reasons. But I believe that at one some state in time that behavior(expansion) will be converted to a different behavior(?) in a manner of phase transition. Fortunately, When i tried to search that idea. I've stumble upon an article on 'phase transition' - cp-3 origins program. They're suggesting prior to their computations (I have no access) that some state of collapse IS happening (not the same as crunch). I'll remain skeptic on eternal inflation. I guess i have a problem with infinity. I don't know. It's just me.^^

http://sdu.dk/en/om_sdu/fakulteterne/naturvidenskab/nyheder/2013_12_12_collapsing_universe
I see your concept as unsupportable personal speculation and the paper you referenced seems to be nonsense. Just a couple of the things in it that jump out as being clearly wrong are:

(1) the statement that physicists believe that a collapse would put the universe "into a small, super hot and super heavy ball" . I've never seen it proposed by any serious cosmologist that a crunch, if there were one, would end up in a small ball because that implies that the universe STARTED as a small ball and no one believes that to be the case.

(1) the statement that the phase change would occur in one place and spread out at the speed of light and thus cause the collapse of the entire universe. Since the entire universe is believed to be much bigger than the observable universe and even things out at the edge of the OU are receding at about 3c, clearly such expansion would at most have an effect on a relatively small localized bubble, at most the size of an observable universe, and could not possibly cause the collapse of the entire universe because it would be causally disconnected from the rest of the universe.
 
  • #170
phinds said:
I see your concept as unsupportable personal speculation and the paper you referenced seems to be nonsense. Just a couple of the things in it that jump out as being clearly wrong are:

(1) the statement that physicists believe that a collapse would put the universe "into a small, super hot and super heavy ball" .

(1) the statement that the phase change would occur in one place and spread out at the speed of light and thus cause the collapse of the entire universe.the entire universe because it would be causally disconnected from the rest of the universe.

I never had the math to begin with and i understand it's against the rules. So i'll cut right away.

Furthermore. I'm more speculating than they did. I'm just curious how they come up with such math(no google luck) to proposed that prediction. I can agree that the universe expansion is still accelerating(timescale not speed) according to latest consensus. I only mentioned a change in 'state'. Will it expand to infinity after the era of black holes(exemption photon decay) resulting to extremely low energy state?- It is really hard to cut down 2 possibilities. It can either go ripping forever based from our present understanding on dark energy assuming that it will remain stable or constant forever. Or chill according to some model. Everything so far changes in state why does dark energy an exemption?

I'm just curious how they come up with such equation and radical concept of crunch. Since using comparison on 1st and second Friedman equation. We can easily dismissed the illusion of negative pressure i.e spatial curvature set to zero in the 2nd equation for convenience. They might used some exotic things to make it work which I'm speculating BTW.
 
  • #171
phinds said:
I have read in serveral posts here that the concept of time in a total void is meaningless. That is, many scadzillions of years from now, assuming the expansion continues and black holes evaporate, and all goes REALLY dark (yes, I'm talking about a LONG time), the concept is that time loses its meaning because there's no way to measure it.

This really is perhaps one of those silly semantic arguments that I usually do not care for but this one is bugging me for some reason.

I GET completely the fact that you can't MEASURE time without matter but the concept that time just stops passing doesn't make sense to me. It is a somewhat pointless distinction, since even if time goes on, nothing HAPPENS. It's just the concept that "time stops" that bothers me and that SEEMS to be what I'm hearing from some of the threads here.

I'd appreciate any comments anyone has on this? Do you think time doesn't exist if you can't measure it because there's nothing to make clocks out of (and even no subatomic interactions to measure your ticks by) ?

I think that it is less an argument about semantics and more an argument about reality. Semantics would not be worth discussing. Your question may be over the border into philosophy, but I don’t see anything wrong with that.

First off, the scenario you paint with the long-term continuation of expansion does not produce a "total void". So long as there is some energy in some form, something must happen and that requires the time dimension.

If the universe ceases to exist, then spacetime vanishes with it. The multiverse theory says that there can be other universes with their own spacetime, perhaps operating under other laws of physics. They can be successors of this universe or they can be existing in parallel. But to get a continuation of time, there would have to some kind of link between the universes. There would be a contînuation of time if this universe is eternally waxing and waning.

Someone said that time should not be equated to the interval between events. I agree with this for two reasons: 1) events themselves take time too, and 2) I doubt that intervals exist anyway. The measurement of time is purely a comparison exercise, just like the measurement of the 3 dimensions of space is a comparison exercise. If space and time are inseparable, then the speed of light is a good yardstick for all of them.

So what about intergalactic space? It is supposed to contain dark energy which causes space to expand, and this requires time too. I don’t see how time can stop, so long as the universe contains something, which it must.

The scenario you paint of a very low density universe would nevertheless allow measurement to take place. That it is actually measured would require a measuring agent in this universe or in another one. In other words, the universe will always be measurable, so long as it exists. If time is inseparable from space, time is also inseparable from the existence of the universe.

Your reference to “time loses its meaning because there's no way to measure it” is understandable, but in the painted scenario, the universe wouldn’t have much meaning either. It probably never had a meaning.

That's my opinion.

.
 
  • #172
Johninch said:
...
Someone said that time should not be equated to the interval between events. I agree with this for two reasons: 1) events themselves take time too ...

You misunderstand the exact meaning of the word "event" as used in physics. Your use is the standard English language meaning. In physics, an event is an idealized exact point in spacetime. Anything with duration (or length for that matter) is not an event, it is a set of events.
 
<h2>1. Why is matter necessary for time to exist?</h2><p>Time and matter are closely intertwined in the fabric of the universe. Matter creates gravitational fields, which affect the flow of time. Additionally, the concept of time is based on the movement and interactions of matter. Without matter, there would be no way to measure time.</p><h2>2. Can time exist without matter?</h2><p>Some theories suggest that time can exist without matter, such as in the vacuum of space. However, it is difficult to imagine a scenario where time could exist without any physical objects or forces. Time is a fundamental aspect of the universe, and it is closely linked to the presence of matter.</p><h2>3. How does matter affect the flow of time?</h2><p>Einstein's theory of relativity explains that the presence of matter causes space-time to curve, which affects the flow of time. The more massive an object is, the stronger its gravitational field, and the slower time moves in its vicinity. This phenomenon, known as gravitational time dilation, has been proven through experiments with atomic clocks.</p><h2>4. Is time a property of matter?</h2><p>While time is not a physical property of matter, it is closely linked to matter and the laws of physics. Time is considered a dimension, along with length, width, and height, and it is affected by the presence and movement of matter. However, time itself is not a property that can be measured or observed in the same way as mass or charge.</p><h2>5. Can time exist in a void or empty space?</h2><p>It is difficult to imagine a scenario where time could exist without any matter or energy. In the vacuum of space, time does exist, but it is affected by the presence of matter and energy. Some theories suggest that time may exist in a void, but it would be impossible to measure or observe without any reference points or objects.</p>

1. Why is matter necessary for time to exist?

Time and matter are closely intertwined in the fabric of the universe. Matter creates gravitational fields, which affect the flow of time. Additionally, the concept of time is based on the movement and interactions of matter. Without matter, there would be no way to measure time.

2. Can time exist without matter?

Some theories suggest that time can exist without matter, such as in the vacuum of space. However, it is difficult to imagine a scenario where time could exist without any physical objects or forces. Time is a fundamental aspect of the universe, and it is closely linked to the presence of matter.

3. How does matter affect the flow of time?

Einstein's theory of relativity explains that the presence of matter causes space-time to curve, which affects the flow of time. The more massive an object is, the stronger its gravitational field, and the slower time moves in its vicinity. This phenomenon, known as gravitational time dilation, has been proven through experiments with atomic clocks.

4. Is time a property of matter?

While time is not a physical property of matter, it is closely linked to matter and the laws of physics. Time is considered a dimension, along with length, width, and height, and it is affected by the presence and movement of matter. However, time itself is not a property that can be measured or observed in the same way as mass or charge.

5. Can time exist in a void or empty space?

It is difficult to imagine a scenario where time could exist without any matter or energy. In the vacuum of space, time does exist, but it is affected by the presence of matter and energy. Some theories suggest that time may exist in a void, but it would be impossible to measure or observe without any reference points or objects.

Similar threads

  • Cosmology
Replies
31
Views
2K
  • Other Physics Topics
Replies
13
Views
2K
Replies
25
Views
1K
Replies
15
Views
2K
  • Cosmology
Replies
6
Views
1K
  • Other Physics Topics
Replies
8
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
9
Views
867
Replies
15
Views
2K
Replies
20
Views
3K
  • Sci-Fi Writing and World Building
3
Replies
87
Views
4K
Back
Top