How is the arrow of time defined?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the concept of the arrow of time, exploring its definition, implications, and the relationship between time and entropy. Participants examine whether physical processes necessitate a unidirectional understanding of time and how this relates to everyday experiences and fundamental physics theories.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants argue that physical processes do not require an arrow of time to be defined, questioning how we can be certain that time is unidirectional.
  • Others reference Sean Carroll's work, suggesting that the concept of entropy is central to understanding the arrow of time.
  • One participant posits that our everyday experience of time is shaped by memory and entropy, indicating that we remember the past when entropy was lower.
  • Another participant introduces the idea that if a universe began with different entropy conditions, it might experience time differently, potentially allowing for time to move backward.
  • Some participants discuss the implications of time reversal, suggesting that if time were to reverse, our consciousness might not perceive any difference due to memory loss.
  • There is mention of weak interactions that are not time symmetric, but participants note that these do not typically affect everyday observations related to the arrow of time.
  • One participant challenges others to describe scenarios consistent with physics where time could be said to move backward, emphasizing the need for specificity.
  • Antiparticles are discussed in relation to time, with some participants suggesting that they can be interpreted as particles moving backward in time, while others clarify that this is a statement of symmetry rather than a direct implication about time direction.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the nature of time and its directionality, with no consensus reached. Some agree on the importance of entropy in defining the arrow of time, while others raise questions about the implications of time reversal and the nature of consciousness.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge that the discussion involves complex interpretations of physical laws, particularly regarding time symmetry and entropy, and that there are unresolved questions about the implications of these concepts.

hailzeyy
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Physical processes do not require an arrow of time to be defined. Then how does one know for certain that time is unidirectional, that there is a past, present and future?
 
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Sean Carroll has written a lot of excellent stuff on this. Short version: it's all about entropy.

He wrote a book on it, "From Eternity to Here: The Quest for the Ultimate Theory of Time," and has a number of videos and essays posted online.

Here's an hour-long talk he gave, for example:


And an FAQ on his blog:
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/cosmicvariance/2007/12/03/arrow-of-time-faq/
 
hailzeyy said:
Physical processes do not require an arrow of time to be defined. Then how does one know for certain that time is unidirectional, that there is a past, present and future?
Because we don't see the dead arising from their graves, or new born infants being absorbed by their mother.
 
hailzeyy said:
Physical processes do not require an arrow of time to be defined.

This is not quite true. There are some processes involving the weak interaction that are not time symmetric. But it is true that these processes aren't involved in the ordinary everyday observations we make that indicate that there is an arrow of time.

hailzeyy said:
how does one know for certain that time is unidirectional, that there is a past, present and future?

Let me turn this question around: what would your everyday experience be like if time were not unidirectional? The arrow of time is a fact of our everyday experience: we remember the past but anticipate the future. The question is how we explain this everyday fact in terms of our fundamental theories of physics. Our best current explanation is that forming a memory of something requires an increase of entropy, so the events we remember took place when entropy was lower than it is when we retrieve the memory. So the arrow of time we perceiver is the arrow of increasing entropy.

As for how entropy can increase if the physical laws involved are time symmetric, our best current explanation is that it is a matter of initial conditions: our universe started out in a very low entropy state, and entropy has been increasing ever since because that is the natural thing to happen when you start with a low entropy state.
 
"As for how entropy can increase if the physical laws involved are time symmetric, our best current explanation is that it is a matter of initial conditions: our universe started out in a very low entropy state, and entropy has been increasing ever since because that is the natural thing to happen when you start with a low entropy state."

Does that mean that if another universe started out different than our with respect to its entropy state, it's possible that time can move forward or backward?
 
PeterDonis said:
Let me turn this question around: what would your everyday experience be like if time were not unidirectional?

Perhaps the processes that implement our consciousness only have a "forward" direction in time, so we think time goes in that direction because our processes of thought go that way.
 
If somehow time reversed direction and we went into our past (this is different from time travel through closed time like circuit), we would not notice anything strange because as we go back in time our corresponding memory also will be lost. So we will feel exactly like when we were there at that point of time. If time again changes direction and we come back to the present, this will feel exactly as if time had always maintained the same direction.
 
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Stephen Tashi said:
Perhaps the processes that implement our consciousness only have a "forward" direction in time

As far as we can tell, this isn't the case; the processes that implement our consciousness do not involve any of the particular aspects of the weak interaction that are known to be time asymmetric.
 
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backward said:
If somehow time reversed direction

Can you describe a way that this could happen, consistent with the laws of physics?
 
  • #10
PeterDonis said:
This is not quite true. There are some processes involving the weak interaction that are not time symmetric. But it is true that these processes aren't involved in the ordinary everyday observations we make that indicate that there is an arrow of time.
These interactions don't follow T symmetry, but do follow the slightly different CPT symmetry exactly. There is a significant difference between those two symmetries, but it makes no conceptual difference as it relates to the question in the OP. We can say that all known physical laws are exactly time-symmetric just by stating that we mean CPT symmetry rather than T symmetry.
 
  • #11
backward said:
If somehow time reversed direction and we went into our past (this is different from time travel through closed time like circuit), we would not notice anything strange because as we go back in time our corresponding memory also will be lost. So we will feel exactly like when we were there at that point of time. If time again changes direction and we come back to the present, this will feel exactly as if time had always maintained the same direction.
There are some ideas, or interpretations... that seem to imply what you stated...
Basically a newer interpretation, here ... of an older one, here .
 
  • #12
PeterDonis said:
Can you describe a way that this could happen, consistent with the laws of physics?
For all we know it may be happening without our knowledge. After all, barring some processes in weak interactions etc there is nothing to prevent time from going backwards.
 
  • #13
backward said:
there is nothing to prevent time from going backwards.

You're missing my point. What does "time going backwards" mean? Can you describe a scenario, consistent with the laws of physics, in which "time goes backwards"? It's not enough just to make a vague general statement. You need to give the specifics.
 
  • #14
OCR said:
There are some ideas, or interpretations... that seem to imply what you stated...

Do they? These interpretations of QM involve "advanced waves", which can be interpreted (if we are willing to tolerate some wiggle room in interpretation) as "waves going backward in time". But the claim backward is making is about "time going backwards". That doesn't seem like the same thing.
 
  • #15
PeterDonis said:
You're missing my point. What does "time going backwards" mean? Can you describe a scenario, consistent with the laws of physics, in which "time goes backwards"? It's not enough just to make a vague general statement. You need to give the specifics.
It means that just as you can and often go back in space cordinates, you go backwards in time coordinate. This is allowed by the laws of Physics with some exceptions. I cannot think of a specific physical process which would trigger time-reversal. So, it is a general statement. Only point I wished to make is that if somehow time reversed direction in our lives, we would fail to notice it.
 
  • #16
For one thing, antiparticles have been interpreted as particles going backwards in time.
 
  • #17
backward said:
For one thing, antiparticles have been interpreted as particles going backwards in time.
Well, no. The correct statement is that a matter particle moving forward in time is the equivalent to an anti-matter particle moving backward in time. If you wanted to, you could just as easily describe a matter particle moving backward in time, which would behave like an anti-matter particle moving forward in time.

In other words, this is a statement of symmetry, not a statement about the time direction of any particular particle. In fact, you can reverse the time direction of any microscopic reaction and get a valid reaction (and if you also swap the particles with anti-particles, you're guaranteed to get identical properties of the reversed reaction).

The way to understand the fact that time seems to have a direction is through entropy, not looking at microscopic particles. The Sean Carroll links I posted above do a pretty good job at introducing the subject.
 
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  • #18
backward said:
It means that just as you can and often go back in space cordinates, you go backwards in time coordinate. This is allowed by the laws of Physics

No, it isn't. That is not what time reversal symmetry means.

Time reversal symmetry means that, if we have a valid solution to the laws of physics that describes some process, then the time reverse of that process is also a valid solution to the laws of physics. For example, one solution to the Newtonian laws of gravity is an object starting from rest at a given height above a large mass and accelerating downward towards the mass. The time reverse of this is an object decelerating upward away from the mass until it comes to rest at a given height. But in both cases, everything goes in the same direction in the time coordinate; nothing in a single solution "turns around" and goes in the opposite direction in the time coordinate.
 
  • #19
PeterDonis said:
... if we are willing to tolerate some wiggle room ...
Wiggle room? ...wiggle room, really?? ...you're joking!

Ten snakes, all at the same time, could crawl though this mess ! ... :oldgrumpy:

"At the same time" ... is even an interpretation with wiggle room ... :oldeyes:
 
  • #20
According to them. In QM arrow of time is determined statistically.. In configuration of particles in space, nothing in theory precludes that in the next step -- particles may become arranged in a way which embodies lower entropy. If you look at only that single event in which the entropy of the system has decreased, you will not be able to tell if time was running forward or backwards. ODOH. Entropy-decreasing events are improbable. As particle evolves-- through more and more steps by statistical probability, there are so many more states for which the entropy increases than states for which entropy decreases, so statistically entropy will increase as the system evolves. Its pretty hard to determine by looking at just one change step you may not be able to tell the time’s arrow, but if you keep looking at more and more steps, it will become clear that entropy increases, and that will tell you the actual arrow of time without a doubt.

.. In LQG--In the area of thermodynamical quantities in equilibrium. Dynamics can be expressed as correlations between variables, and does not need a time to be specified.
 
  • #21
It's a really difficult subject.

As I see it, the problem can be formulated as: why when you go forward in time particles have hard time colliding (most of the time they miss), while if you go backward in time they somehow find themselves exactly where they need to be to interact. E.g. muon decay, seen backwards, looks like this: electron and e-antineutrino collide, turn into W-, and this W- magically happens to be just in the right place to collide with a very convenient mu-antineutrino passing by, and turn into muon.

One may say "it's natural for particles to usually miss each other". Well, it looks natural to us only because we are conditioned by all our experience since birth to see exactly this behavior as normal.

Possibly, both behaviors are okay (they are not nonsensical), the "reversed" one only looks weird to us. This is not the difficult question.

The question is, why they are _different_, while laws of physics are _time-symmetric_?
 
  • #22
nikkkom said:
The question is, why they are _different_, while laws of physics are _time-symmetric_?

Because the laws being time symmetric is not the same as the individual solutions being time symmetric. Time symmetric laws can have time asymmetric solutions, as long as the solutions occur in pairs that are time reverses of each other. We happen to live in one particular time asymmetric solution, so we consider that kind of time asymmetry as "normal" and the opposite kind, the kind in the time reverse of our solution (which must exist if the laws are time symmetric), to be "weird".
 
  • #23
I know what spontaneous symmetry breaking is :)

This still isn't a satisfactory explanation. With EW symmetry breaking, we have an explanation why vacuum is not symmetric under it: it's easy to read off the Higgs potential that it has a minimum away from zero field state.

No such thing is obvious with time asymmetry.
 
  • #24
nikkkom said:
I know what spontaneous symmetry breaking is :)

I wasn't talking about spontaneous symmetry breaking. Our expanding universe is a time asymmetric solution of the laws of GR; there is a corresponding time asymmetric solution describing a contracting universe. Neither one arises by spontaneous symmetry breaking. But they're still a pair of time asymmetric solutions that are time reverses of each other.
 
  • #25
In the GR solution which is a contracting Universe muons would still usually decay, not "spontaneously reconstitute" from electrons and antineutrinos. Time asymmetry would not be reversed.
 
  • #26
nikkkom said:
In the GR solution which is a contracting Universe muons would still usually decay, not "spontaneously reconstitute" from electrons and antineutrinos.

Not once the temperature got high enough during the contraction. From the standpoint of GR, we just have a "cosmological fluid" whose proportion of muons relative to electrons and antineutrinos varies with temperature, and the temperature varies with time, and that variation in the contracting solution is the exact time reverse of the variation in the expanding solution.

You could also look at a much more detailed solution that includes QFT as well as GR, so you have to include not just the usual GR description of the matter and radiation present in terms of perfect fluids, but the detailed QFT description of all the fields and their states. Then you would find that there would be a contracting universe solution in which the initial conditions were such that the inverse reaction of electrons + antineutrinos -> muons happened in the exact time reversed way that the forward reaction of muons -> electrons + antineutrinos happens in our expanding solution. Of course this contracting solution would not look "normal" to us, since inverse decay would predominate over decay; but there would also be another contracting solution with different initial conditions, such that the muon decay looked "normal" (muon decay predominating over inverse) in the contracting universe; and there would be an expanding solution that is the time reverse of that one, in which the initial conditions were such that the inverse of muon decay predominated during the expansion, and this expanding solution would not look "normal" to us. But in all of this, the underlying laws are still time symmetric; you just have to look more carefully at what the "time reverse" of a given solution means.
 
  • #27
PeterDonis said:
Not once the temperature got high enough during the contraction. From the standpoint of GR, we just have a "cosmological fluid" whose proportion of muons relative to electrons and antineutrinos varies with temperature, and the temperature varies with time, and that variation in the contracting solution is the exact time reverse of the variation in the expanding solution.

You could also look at a much more detailed solution that includes QFT as well as GR

Actually, I would prefer to have a simpler picture. Namely, to go from GR to SR.

There is no obvious reason to link arrow of time with the expansion of the Universe. Physics in flat Minkowski space, which is time translation invariant, exhibits the same time asymmetry between past and future: muons decay, not reconstitute.
 
  • #28
nikkkom said:
There is no obvious reason to link arrow of time with the expansion of the Universe.

I didn't say we had to. In fact the examples I have given show the opposite, that as far as valid solutions of the laws are concerned, there is no reason why the "arrows of time" associated with different processes (expansion vs. muon decay, in my example) must be linked. Any such link (or more properly "correlation") is a property of a particular solution, not of the overall set of solutions.

nikkkom said:
Physics in flat Minkowski space, which is time translation invariant, exhibits the same time asymmetry between past and future: muons decay, not reconstitute.

In other words, you are now claiming that there is no valid solution of the laws that corresponds to a Minkowski spacetime in which muon decay goes in reverse. Can you back that up with actual math? I strongly doubt it, since you have already said the inverse reaction to muon decay is physically possible.
 
  • #29
PeterDonis said:
In other words, you are now claiming that there is no valid solution of the laws that corresponds to a Minkowski spacetime in which muon decay goes in reverse.

Not at all. I'm just saying that in Minkowski spacetime, for some reason muons far more often decay than "reconstitute", when you go in "future" time direction. Of course they can, and sometimes they do "reconstitute".
 
  • #30
nikkkom said:
I'm just saying that in Minkowski spacetime, for some reason muons far more often decay than "reconstitute", when you go in "future" time direction.

And what is your basis for this claim? It can't be based on what we actually observe, because we are not talking about our particular solution of the laws; we are talking about all possible solutions of the laws. So you must be claiming that there is no valid solution of the laws in which muons reconstitute more than they decay in Minkowski spacetime. I am asking if you can back up that claim. Can you?

Perhaps it will help if I describe such a "reconstituting" solution. You are basically envisioning a solution which describes Minkowski spacetime which has some distribution of quantum fields in the "far past" that has a supply of muons and no (or very few) electrons and antineutrinos; and you are saying that in the "far future", there will be few if any muons left and a much larger number of electrons and antineutrinos. But it seems obvious that there will be another valid solution, the exact time reverse of this one, in which there is a large number of electrons and antineutrinos in the "far past", and where the initial conditions are set up just right (as they must be, for this solution to be the exact time reverse of the one I just described) for those electrons and antineutrinos to collide with each other and form muons, creating a large supply of muons in the "far future". So in this solution, muons reconstitute more than they decay.

The only basis I can see for the claim of yours that I quoted above is to somehow show that the "reconstituting" solution I just described is not a valid solution, without using any time asymmetric laws. Can you?
 

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