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by gregdunn
2771 days ago
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> It is perfectly okay to say something is happening at 1 million light years away. Well, maybe. Maybe not. Carlo Rovelli would argue that time doesn't exist like that (or at all) and that saying that something is happening now when it is beyond our lightcone would be a meaningless statement, and a lot of physicists would agree with him. (A lot would disagree, too.) Reference frames only clear this up if time does exist in a meaningful way and 'now' is more than a construction of our own observation. |
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Rovelli's position is that time is not fundamental, not that it does not exist. It emerges from something more fundamental.
That is, he argues that there exists a theory (or family of theories) from which one can derive both General Relativity and Relativistic Quantum Field Theory in their effective limits, and that such a theory does not need to be paramaterized by time (or more broadly, does not need to explicitly reference the notion of time at all).
More precisely, he and Connes propose[1] that statistical regularities in a generally covariant quantum system (our block universe) are just as much "laws" as dynamical relations like F = ma or F = dp/dt = \gamma(v)^3 m_0 a_parallel + \gamma(v)^1 m_0 a_perpendicular. There are macroscopic constraints and a low-entropy initial condition in the universe that takes our system away from being in just any configuration with equal probability, and towards a configuration with an entropy gradient. From that entropy gradient we can recover a notion of time, and even coordinatize it. Time emerges in a block universe (and indeed most subregions thereof) arranged in this way.
> something is happening now when it is beyond our lightcone
Galaxies probably don't cease to exist at the moment they cross out of our causal cone with the metric expansion, or soon afterwards. We exist even though there are observers who saw our ancestors cross out of their causal cones. Do you think the density and spectrum of the CMB evolve very differently for them and for us? Do you assert that such a question is meaningless? Do you think Rovelli does? (If so, why do you think that?)
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[1] A. Connes, C. Rovelli, "Von Neumann Algebra Automorphisms and Time-Thermodynamics Relation in General Covariant Quantum Theories", Class. Quantum Grav. 11:2899–2918, 1994.
https://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9406019