Does time exist for cosmologists?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the existence and conceptualization of time within the field of cosmology. Participants explore various ways of measuring time and its implications for understanding the universe, including the relationship between time and physical phenomena such as the cosmic microwave background.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant discusses the complexities of measuring time, highlighting how factors like relative motion and mass affect our understanding of simultaneity and the passage of time in the context of General Relativity.
  • Another participant suggests that time in cosmology could be replaced by temperature or other measurements, hinting at a deeper meaning behind these concepts.
  • A different viewpoint references Penrose's idea that understanding time's nature is an ongoing challenge, implying that the mystery of time remains unsolved.
  • A humorous remark is made about cosmologists being late for appointments, possibly reflecting on the complexities of time measurement in their field.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the nature of time in cosmology, with no consensus reached. Some propose that time may not fundamentally exist, while others argue for its importance in understanding cosmic phenomena.

Contextual Notes

The discussion includes various assumptions about the nature of time and its measurement, with references to both General Relativity and practical measurements like cosmic microwave background temperature. The implications of these ideas remain unresolved.

oldman
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Does time exist for cosmologists?

Few would deny that time - as we experience it - is a vitally important feature of life and living.

But does time exist for modern cosmology?

There are different ways of gauging time. One measure is age, say that of a horse, gauged with limited accuracy by the state of its teeth (I’ll call this a horse-measure for fun); another is the time of day, say solar time, gauged roughly with a sundial. And telling the time with quartz-oscillator watches reveals that solar time and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) almost always don’t agree --- for reasons contributors to this forum understand. As precision of gauging increases, subtleties creep into the measuring of time, so important in our lives: relative motion affects the gauging of time, but only to a degree that hardly affects the intervals of time encountered in the everyday life of ordinary folk. The proximity of large masses similarly affects the gauging of time. Such subtleties are in physics described quantitatively with an invented language --- namely mathematics, where abstraction rules.

The judgement of which spatially separate events are simultaneous, what happened in the past, or will occur in the future, then becomes a complex matter described by General Relativity (GR). Such questions are decided by first agreeing how simultaneity is to be defined, then by considering the relative motions of observers (both as in Special Relativity), and lastly by taking into account an observers’s environment of mass/energy with GR. The importance of these factors is small in usual human experience, where simultaneity is defined by what we now see, and where one’s speed, or environment, are relatively unimportant. But accurate experiments and observations show that account must indeed be taken of them.

It has been argued (say by Julian Barbour in his bookThe End of Time) that our best abstract description of the universe, GR, does not require that time exists. In GR, as I understand it, “Now” is represented in an abstract way by hyperplanes in four-dimensional Spacetime, which itself is a sort of 'block-representation' of reality. These sections are not 'plane', but meander across Spacetime like rivers sketched on paper, along paths determined both by an observer’s motion and his/her mass/energy environment. But there are knowledgeable people (my compatriate George Ellis, for example) who believe that a description without time can’t be reconciled with our own experience. I also feel it is too Platonic.

Specifically, consider a simple and practical 'horse-measure' of age that could be used by
cosmologists who accept the current consensus: any such cosmologist --- here or elsewhere in the universe, at any epoch --- could gauge cosmic age simply be measuring (accurately) the temperature of the (almost uniform) cosmic microwave background, which is postulated to be relic radiation from an energetic and compact beginning that permeates the universe. How is the view that time does not have a fundamental existence to be
reconciled with such a simple 'horse measure'? This measure has to do with irreversible physics; ageing and the cooling of the universe, rather than GR!
 
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yeah,I am attracted in it for a long time. In the cosmology the time could be replaced by the temperature or another measurement I forgot the name . I have had a strong feeling that it must imply some innermost meaning of the universe and the secret of the time ,which will excit us a lot.
 


Maybe, just as Penrose said ,it is just the time to solve the time's secret.
 


So that's why cosmologists are always late for appointments!
 

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