Quote: Original post by IFooBar
So I was watching sound of thunder today (warning, it was horrible, watch at own risk) and now I'm wondering if you could devise an experiment, or algorithm, that could calculate how fast change ripples into the future. Is it instant? (i.e. kill butterfly a billion years ago and kapoot, universe disappears?) or does it take some time to get to the present? Do all the changes happen at once? Or do they come in waves (this is what happened in the movie)? And if they do come in waves, again, how long does it take?
Do you guys know of any research into this kind of stuff?
"Change" in this context is kind of meaningless (which is what I took szecs' comment to mean).
Your question sounds more Hollywood to me than real. What does it mean for "change" to "ripple" into the future? If I go back in time and stop Hitler from being born, the "change" that I have enacted is discrete, in the sense that I have actively taken action to alter the occurrence of a single event. Ensuing events will be different, but have no relationship to an arbitrary collection of other events we feel "would" have happened.
As Hodgman stated, time would continue to progress at one second per second. But at this point there is no "rippling" of change or anything else; the future, which by definition has not yet occurred, cannot be compared to anything as it does not yet exist.
For the purposes of comparison we could say that Timeline A (where Hitler existed) is different from Timeline B (in which he was never born). But from a chronological perspective, after our historical meddling none of the events of Timeline A occur, as the conditions we created require some different set of events to take place. There is no medium through which a ripple could travel-- time is still linear.
I would also ask about what you mean by "present". The present is thet time where you currently find yourself, and as such is relative. If you go back in time from today to 1500 AD, 1500 AD would be the "present" for you. There is no arbitrary time to be reached for your comparisons to be made. If you watch the outcomes of any historical changes you make happen as they occur, then changes will reach the future at one second per second, as above. If you time-jump again to 1,000 years later, then all changes that took place in the interim might be viewed as having reached your new present (2500 AD) "all at once", with additional events taking place at one second per second.
But it's all guesswork. It's pointless to argue the feasability of this or that aspect of time travel, just like there's no point to arguing how artificial gravity works, or warp speed travel. The particulars of time travel are whatever your heart desires them to be-- if there were rules about it that were understood well enough to address your questions, we would have time travel technology. So far all that we can agree on is that a flux capacitor is absolutely required.