Superleopard21 said:
Not really the best way to think of time. Depends which formulation of physics, that is, which mathematical models, you are considering.
In everyday math, say, d = v x t, or d = 1/2 at
2one usually thinks of distance as increasing in the same direction as v, and time as a scalar...as an independent parameter.
Locally, in GR, my time ticks along at the same old fixed pace we usually attribute to, say, wrist watch ticks. So does yours. No big mystery.
But Einstein taught us that distant observers in relative motion see other's space and time as mixed up...your space and my time appear differently than I view your space and your time; and that 'craziness' has been experimentally verified many times in many ways. [This is special relativity] Then Einstein figures out not only does relative velocity [a vector] change distant observers relative passage of time, so does gravity...that is, gravitational potential. So time is more complex than a simple vector. [This is general relativity.]
Carlo Rovelli, a well respected theoretician, makes these interesting observations:
"
In GR there is no external time parameter… a notion of proper time is associated ….[with] each timelike worldline; yet in quantum theory there are no physical individual trajectories… only transition probabilities between observables….
Conventional QFT relies ….on the existence of a non–dynamical background spacetime metric..[but]…with GR we have understood that there is no such non–dynamical background spacetime metric in nature…. " "
[And here are some comments of his regarding time in relativity...not how we usually think of 'simple old time'.]
"...In special relativity, this notion of time is weakened. Clocks do not measure a universal time variable, but only the proper time elapsed along inertial trajectories. ...In general relativity, when we describe the dynamics of the gravitational field ..., there is no external time variable that can play the role of observable independent evolution variable. The field equations are written in terms of an evolution parameter, which is the time coordinate x0, but this coordinate, does not correspond to anything directly observable. ... properly speaking, GR does not admit a description as a system evolving in terms of an observable time variable...
http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0604045
Unfinished revolution
[This paper is about relativity and quantum theory. 'Spacetime' [space and time] plays a major role in trying to reconcile these rather different theories.