Time and moving clocks.

Time never seems to do what we want it to. There never seems to be enough of it when we are late for work or school, but far too much of it when we have to stand in the pouring rain waiting for a bus. These annoyances apart, it seems that time flows along smoothly; never bending, never changing its rate: always "on time". This steady flow is so reliable that we fit our lives around it. We start the day when the clock tells us to, work when it tells us to, eat when it tells us to, and go to bed when it tells us to. Time, it seems, is constant.

A sundial. Constant time?

That the flow of time is constant is seemingly obvious and this has been the prevailing view for almost all of human history. Sir Isaac Newton, when he wasn't dodging falling apples, certainly thought time was constant. He gave us the idea of a "clockwork universe", in which it would be possible to know not only all of the past but all of the future if only we could say where every particle was, in what direction each particle was moving and at what speed. This model assumed, not unreasonably, that time flows at an ever constant rate. As brilliant as Newton was, he was, much to everyone's surprise, wrong.

Sir Issac Newton (1642-1727) Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

In 1905 Albert Einstein published his Special Theory of Relativity. This work considered time not as a single constantly flowing entity, but as part of a much more complex system, linked with that of space itself. This is called space-time. Because space and time are part of the same entity it is impossible to move in space without moving in time. Time, for anything moving, changes.

One of the most amazing consequences of special relativity is that any moving clock slows down relative to a stationary observer. There are many different types of clock, such as digital watches, clockwork clocks, atomic clocks and even our own biological clocks. They are all equally affected by the same principle, namely: moving clocks run slow:

Running Clock
Moving clocks run slow

How slow do clocks run?

If moving clocks run slowly why don't we notice? The are two reasons for this:

  1. We are going far too slowly for any noticeable change to take place.
  2. Even if we go at high enough speeds to bring about a large slowing down of local time we wouldn't notice because our own body clocks would also be running just as slowly.

The speed of light is 300,000km per second (186,300 miles per second). It isn't until we get to speeds that are a large fraction of the speed of light that any change in the flow of time becomes apparent. What's more, the effect grows in magnitude very rapidly at speeds very close to that of light.

This slowing down of clocks due to high speeds is called time dilation and has a precise mathematical relationship. For the sake of completeness I have included the relevant equation but you may skip it and move on to the graph below it if you wish. The equation for time dilation is:

Time Dilation Equation

This equation makes more sense when we apply it to a graph:

We can see from the graph that at "low" speeds there is only a small change in time dilation (i.e. the flow of time doesn't change very much), but at speeds over about 75% of the speed of light the effect of time dilation is quite dramatic. Even at the "low speed" of 10% of the speed of light (i.e. 30,000 km per second) our clocks would slow down by only around 1%, but if we travel at 95% of the speed of light time will slow down to about one-third of that measured by a stationary observer. Note that at zero percent of the speed of light there is no time dilation at all. Also, while we can get as close to the speed of light as we want, it is impossible to actually reach a speed of 100% of the speed of light.

So, when we move very quickly, time slows down relative to a stationary observer. Note that for the occupants of a rocket travelling at very high speeds time would still seem to pass normally. However, if they could see out to an Earth-bound clock it would appear, to them, to be running too quickly. If an Earth-bound observer could see a clock inside the rocket it would appear to be running too slowly. This is why the theory is called "relativity", it is because time is relative to whoever is observing it at a particular speed.

 

The Universal Speed Limit.

One question frequently asked about relativity is "what would happen if we went faster than light?". The usual "answer" is that time would run backwards. Special relativity tells us that this is simply not possible. The universe has a speed limit of just under the speed of light, and it has a clever way of stopping us from breaking it. As we go faster our apparent mass (i.e. as measured by an external observer) increases in proportion to our speed. In fact our mass seems to increase at about the same rate as time slows down (in a similar way to the graph seen earlier). We know from everyday experience that the heavier (i.e. more massive) an object is the more energy is needed to move it.

If we try to move an object at just above 0% of the speed of light we will find that it has the mass we expect it to. However, as noted, the mass of the object will appear to increase in proportion to our speed. For example, at 99.5% of the speed of light the object will "weigh" around 10 times what it did when it was stationary:

As our speed goes ever higher so the apparent mass increases, and so does the energy required to move it. At the speed of light it would take infinite energy to move any mass! Since it is clearly impossible to obtain infinite energy we can never quite reach the speed of light (but we can get as close as our energy supply, and technology, will allow). Note that the occupants of any rocket travelling at very high speeds will not be aware of any increase in mass, just as they wouldn't be aware in any change in the rate that time passes. It is only when they measure the mass of stationary (more accurately, near stationary) observers that they will see that there has been a change in mass. However, the astronauts will perceive that everything around them has changed mass while their own mass seems to have remained constant.

There is something that can travel at the speed of light, and that is, of course, light! See later in this page for an explanation.

 

What are the consequences of time dilation?

One of the strangest consequences of time dilation is the so-called "twin paradox". In this "paradox" one identical twin is sent at very high speed out into space. Because he or she is travelling at a very high speed all the clocks on board the rocket, including the body clock of the twin, are slowed down in accordance with the principle that "moving clocks run slow". When the twin returns he or she will have aged only a little compared to the Earth-bound twin (who's clock has been running "normally"). There is a more detailed example of this on the page Special Relativity in under 15 Minutes!

There is a group of people who's job it is to spend their time smashing very small particles together to see what happens. These people are called particle (or high energy) physicists. For these people relativity is as much part of their job as is a blackboard to a teacher or a road is to a truck driver. The particles they smash apart are very tough, and so need an immense amount of energy to break them apart. One way (but not the only way) to give the particles a lot of energy is to move them very quickly in large magnetic rings called particle accelerators. This research is considered so important that all of the major countries of the world have access to particle accelerators. Here is the accelerator used by the European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN), based at Geneva:

As you can see, it needs a very big machine to break apart a very small particle!

Many of the experiments would be over far too quickly to see anything if it wasn't for the fact that, because of the high speeds involved and special relativity, the internal "clocks" of the particles are greatly slowed down. For example, when two particles, such as atoms, are smashed into each other at very high speeds they sometimes stick together to form a new particle. Most of these heavier particles promptly fall apart with very short time frames, sometimes within only a trillionth of a second. By speeding the process up not only is it possible to impart enough energy to the original particles to actually combine them, but the resulting, heavier, particle "lives" longer, in exact accordance with how special relativity says it should at the speed it is moving..

 

The speed of Light.

To state the seemingly obvious: light travels at the speed of light. How can it do this? Why doesn't it need infinite energy to go that fast? The answer is that particles of light (called photons) have no mass. More accurately, they have no "rest mass". Photons are constantly moving but if we could stop one and weigh it we would find that it has no mass whatsoever. The reasons for this are beyond the scope of these pages, but every experiment ever done to find any mass in light has failed. Not only that but all the experiments have indicated that light is indeed mass-less.

Light doesn't always travel at the "speed of light", and it doesn't take much to slow it down. You are able to read this now only because light, either emitted from your screen or reflected off a paper copy, is striking the back of your eyes and stimulating special cells which in turn send a "picture" to your brain. At a comfortable reading distance the air between your eyes and these words is slowing down light by about 50km/h (30mph). This is a very tiny percentage of the "usual" speed of light, but we have to be careful when we say that light travels at the speed of light.

Light can only travel "at the speed of light" in a vacuum, such as in space. When it does so it travels at 300,000 km per second (186,300 miles per second). At that speed it can travel around the world seven times every second. This is undoubtedly very fast indeed, but in terms of the size of the universe it is still very slow. For example, it still takes light 1.5 seconds to reach us from the moon, 8.5 minutes to reach us from the Sun, 4.25 years to reach us from the nearest star (apart from the Sun), and about 12-15 billion years to reach us from the furthest objects yet seen!

A million or a billion years is a very long time, but perhaps we are forgetting something. We are measuring time with our own, Earth-bound clocks! Relative to most objects in space our clocks can be considered to be very near stationary. So how does a photon travelling at the speed of light experience time?

If you look into a clear night sky at the right time of year (winter in the northern hemisphere) you will see a pattern of stars that looks like this:

The object shown as M31 is the Andromeda galaxy, and is rather like our Milky Way. On a clear night you can see it as a faint chalk-like smudge on the sky, and it is the furthest object we can see with the naked eye. Pictures taken with powerful telescopes show it to be composed of millions and millions of stars, many of which are just like our own Sun. The Andromeda galaxy is so far away that it takes the light from it, as measured with our Earth-bound clocks, over two million years to reach us. However, a photon emitted from a star in Andromeda and heading out towards the Earth travels in a vacuum and, because it is a photon, travels at the speed of light. Because the photon is moving at the speed of light it has a 100% time dilation factor. To the photon time does not exist until it strikes the upper atmosphere of our planet and even then is only slowed down by a tiny fraction. According to a photon in free space, time has no meaning whatsoever, and it gets from wherever it is to wherever it is going instantly!

The Andromeda Galaxy. (The individual stars are in our own Milky Way Galaxy).

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© Jim Doyle
Date created 26 Sep 99
Last updated: 23 Oct 05