The Nature of Time
eBook - ePub

The Nature of Time

  1. 156 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Nature of Time

About this book

This book reviews and contrasts contemporary and historical perceptions of time from scientific and intuitive human points of view. Ancient and modern clocks, Augustinian ideas, the deterministic Newtonian universe, biological clocks, deep time, thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, and relativity all contribute to the perspective. The focus is on what can be inferred from established technologies and science as opposed to futuristic speculation.

Chapter 1 describes clocks, including the cesium atomic clocks establishing the current global time standard, a history of clock development, biological clocks, phylogenetic trees, radioactive dating, and astronomical methods to determine the age of the universe. Chapter 2 poses ancient questions about time not fully addressed by an understanding of the technical nature of clocks. An early summary of some of these questions as described by Augustine in the 3rd century CE is followed by a description of how Newton, 1300 years later, introduced a conception of time which provided some answers, such as the nature of an infinitesimally short present. Implications concerning the reality of events in the past, present, and future are also discussed. The Newtonian picture is contrasted with the intuitive human one and the possibilities of time travel and temporal recurrence are briefly discussed. Chapter 3 introduces the second law of thermodynamics and addresses how it is compatible with a time-reversible Newtonian description of a universe, even though it appears to define an "arrow of time." The nature of entropy and its relation to coarse graining and emergence play a central role in the discussion. Chapter 4 discusses ways in which quantum mechanics has altered the Newtonian perspective, accounting for various interpretations of the meaning of quantum mechanics with regard to time. Chapter 5 describes basic elements of special relativity and their implications for the nature of time. Examples of time dilation and the changing order of space, such as separated events in different frames, are described. The examples are chosen to avoid evocation of currently unattainable technologies. An afterword in chapter 6 reviews questions raised by Augustine and summarizes how the development of science since then has addressed them.

This book was originally developed for an interdisciplinary seminar for beginning undergraduates at the University of Minnesota. It uses a small amount of algebra, mainly in supplementary appendices, and does not assume any prior knowledge of physics, chemistry, biology, or astronomy. In contrast to many semipopular books on time, it avoids speculation either about engineering (techno-optimism) or physical theory (strings, loop quantum gravity, black hole entropy). Instead, it takes a more grounded approach and describes what is currently known (and not known) to help both students and the general reader make better sense of time.

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Yes, you can access The Nature of Time by J. Woods Halley in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Physical Sciences & Physics. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
CRC Press
Year
2022
Print ISBN
9780367478759
eBook ISBN
9781000688092
Edition
1
Subtopic
Physics
Index
Physics

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Half-Title Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Contents
  6. Preface
  7. Chapter 1 Clocks: The Nature of Time Measurement
  8. Chapter 2 Issues in the Nature of Time
  9. Chapter 3 Thermodynamics, Irreversibility and Time
  10. Chapter 4 Quantum Mechanics and Time
  11. Chapter 5 Relativity and Time
  12. Chapter 6 Afterword
  13. Appendix 1.1 Some Atomic Physics of the Cesium Clock
  14. Appendix 1.2 A Few Facts about Molecular Biology
  15. Appendix 1.3 Determining the Age of the Earth
  16. Appendix 1.4 Doppler Shifts
  17. Appendix 1.5 Determination of Distances of Galaxies from Earth and Estimates of the Age of the Universe
  18. Appendix 2.1 Defining the Instantaneous Present and Predicting the Future with Newtonian Physics
  19. Appendix 3.1 Coarse Graining in Card Games
  20. Appendix 5.1 Michelson Morley experiment
  21. Appendix 5.2 The ‘G’ in the Lorentz Transformation
  22. Appendix 5.3 Proper Time Intervals are the Same in All Frames
  23. Bibliography
  24. Index