Everything about Arrow Of Time totally explained
» This article is an overview of the subject. For a more technical discussion and for information related to current research, see Entropy (arrow of time).
In the
natural sciences,
arrow of time, or
time’s arrow, is a term coined in 1927 by British astronomer
Arthur Eddington used to distinguish a direction of time on a four-dimensional relativistic map of the world; which, according to Eddington, can be determined by a study of organizations of atoms, molecules, and bodies.
Physical processes at the
microscopic level are believed to be either entirely or mostly
time symmetric, meaning that the theoretical statements that describe them remain true if the direction of time is reversed; yet when we describe things at the
macroscopic level it often appears that this isn't the case: there's an obvious direction (or
flow) of
time. An
arrow of time is anything that exhibits such time-asymmetry.
History of term
From the 1928 book
The Nature of the Physical World, which helped to popularize the term, Eddington states:
Eddington then gives three points to note about this arrow:
- It is vividly recognized by consciousness.
- It is equally insisted on by our reasoning faculty, which tells us that a reversal of the arrow would render the external world nonsensical.
- It makes no appearance in physical science except in the study of organization of a number of individuals.
Here, according to Eddington, the arrow indicates the direction of progressive increase of the random element. Following a lengthy argument into the nature of
thermodynamics, Eddington concludes that in so far as physics is concerned time's arrow is a property of
entropy alone.
Overview
The symmetry of time (
T-symmetry) can be understood by a simple analogy: if time were perfectly symmetric then it would be possible to watch a movie taken of real events and everything that happens in the movie would seem realistic whether it was played forwards or backwards.
For example, a movie showing a cup falling off a table seems realistic when run forwards, but seems unrealistic if run backwards. On the other hand, a movie of the
planets orbiting the
sun would look equally realistic run forwards or backwards; either way the orbital motions would appear to conform to physical laws.
An example of irreversibility
Consider the situation in which a large
container is filled with two separated
liquids, for example a dye on one side and water on the other. With no barrier between the two liquids, the random jostling of their
molecules will result in them becoming more mixed as time passes. However, if the dye and water are mixed then one doesn't expect them to separate out again when left to themselves. A movie of the mixing would seem realistic when played forwards, but unrealistic when played backwards.
If the large container is observed early on in the mixing process, it might be found to be only partially mixed. It would be reasonable to conclude that, without outside intervention, the liquid reached this state because it was more ordered in the past, when there was greater separation, and will be more disordered, or mixed, in the future.
Now imagine that the experiment is repeated, this time with only a few molecules, perhaps ten, in a very small container. One can easily imagine that by watching the random jostling of the molecules it might occur — by chance alone — that the molecules became neatly segregated, with all dye molecules on one side and all water molecules on the other. That this can be expected to occur from time to time can be concluded from the
fluctuation theorem; thus it isn't impossible for the molecules to segregate themselves. However, for a large numbers of molecules it's so unlikely that one would have to wait, on average, many times longer than the age of the universe for it to occur. Thus a movie that showed a large number of molecules segregating themselves as described above would appear unrealistic and one would be inclined to say that the movie was being played in reverse.
See also
another example.
Arrows
The thermodynamic arrow of time
The
thermodynamic arrow of time is provided by the
Second Law of Thermodynamics, which says that in an
isolated system,
entropy will only increase with time; it won't decrease with time. Entropy can be thought of as a measure of ; thus the Second Law implies that time is asymmetrical with respect to the amount of order in an isolated system: as time increases, a system will always become more disordered. This asymmetry can be used
empirically to distinguish between
future and
past.
Since the Second Law is statistical, it doesn't hold with strict universality: any system can fluctuate to a state of lower entropy (see the
Poincaré recurrence theorem). However, the Second Law seems to accurately describe the overall trend in real systems toward higher entropy.
This arrow of time seems to be related to all other arrows of time and arguably underlies some of them, with the exception of the
weak arrow of time.
The cosmological arrow of time
The
cosmological arrow of time points in the direction of the universe's expansion. It may be linked to the thermodynamic arrow, with the universe heading towards a
heat death (Big Chill) as the amount of usable energy becomes negligible. Alternatively, it may be an artifact of our place in the universe's evolution (see the
Anthropic bias), with this arrow reversing as
gravity pulls everything back into a
Big Crunch.
If this arrow of time is related to the other arrows of time, then the future is
by definition the direction towards which the universe becomes bigger. Thus, the universe expands - rather than shrinks - by definition.
The thermodynamic arrow of time and the
Second law of thermodynamics are thought to be a consequence of the
initial conditions in the early universe. Therefore they ultimately result from the cosmological set-up.
The radiative arrow of time
Waves, from
radio waves to
sound waves to those on a pond from throwing a stone, expand outward from their source, even though the
wave equations allow for solutions of convergent waves as well as radiative ones. This arrow has been reversed in carefully worked experiments which have created convergent waves, so this arrow probably follows from the thermodynamic arrow in that meeting the conditions to produce a convergent wave requires more order than the conditions for a radiative wave. Put differently, the probability for initial conditions that produce a convergent wave is much lower than the probability for initial conditions that produce a radiative wave. In fact, normally a radiative wave increases entropy, while a convergent wave decreases it, making the latter contradictory to the
Second Law of Thermodynamics in usual circumstances.
The causal arrow of time
Causes are ordinarily thought to precede effects. The future can be controlled, but not the past.
A problem with using causality as an arrow of time is that, as
David Hume pointed out, the causal relation per se can't be perceived; one only perceives sequences of events. Furthermore it's surprisingly difficult to provide a clear explanation of what the terms "cause" and "effect" really mean. It does seem evident that dropping the plate is the cause, the plate shattering is the effect.
Physically speaking, this is another manifestation of the thermodynamic arrow of time, and is a consequence of the
Second law of thermodynamics. Controlling the future, or causing something to happen, creates
correlations between the doer and the effect, and these can only be created as we move forwards in time, not backwards.
The particle physics (weak) arrow of time
Certain subatomic interactions involving the
weak nuclear force violate the conservation of both
parity and
charge conjugation, but only very rarely. An example is the
kaon decay (External Link
). According to the
CPT Theorem, this means they should also be time irreversible, and so establish an arrow of time. Such processes should be responsible for
matter creation in the early universe.
This arrow isn't linked to any other arrow by any proposed mechanism, and if it would have pointed to the opposite time direction, the only difference would have been that our universe would be made of anti-matter rather than from matter. More accurately, the definitions of matter and anti-matter would just be reversed.
That the combination of
parity and
charge conjugation is broken so rarely means that this arrow only "barely" points in one direction, setting it apart from the other arrows whose direction is much more obvious.
The quantum arrow of time
According to the
Copenhagen interpretation of
quantum mechanics, quantum evolution is governed by the
Schrödinger equation, which is time-symmetric, and by
wave function collapse, which is time irreversible. As the mechanism of wave function collapse is
philosophically obscure, it isn't completely clear how this arrow links to the others. While at the microscopic level, collapse seems to show no favor to increasing or decreasing entropy, some believe there's a bias which shows up on macroscopic scales as the thermodynamic arrow. According to the modern physical view of
wave function collapse, the theory of
quantum decoherence, the quantum arrow of time is a consequence of the
thermodynamic arrow of time.
The psychological/perceptual arrow of time
Psychological time is, in part, the cataloguing of ever increasing items of memory from continuous changes in perception. In other words, things we remember make up the past, while the future consists of those events that can't be remembered. The ancient method of comparing unique events to generalized repeating events such as the apparent movement of the sun, moon, and stars provided a convenient grid work to accomplish this. The consistent increase in memory volume creates one mental arrow of time. Another arises because one has the sense that one's perception is a continuous movement from the known (Past) to the unknown (Future). Anticipating the unknown forms the psychological future which always seems to be something one is moving towards, but, like a projection in a mirror, it makes what is actually already a part of memory, such as desires, dreams, and hopes, seem ahead of the observer.
The association of (behind = past) and (ahead = future) is itself culturally determined. For example, the Chinese and the
Aymara people both associate (ahead = past) and (behind = future). In Chinese, for instance, the term "the day after tomorrow" literally means "behind day" while "the day before yesterday" is referred to as "front day".
The other side of the psychological passage of time is in the realm of volition and action. We plan and often execute actions intended to affect the course of events in the future. Hardly anyone tries to change past events. Indeed, in the
Rubaiyat it's written (sic):
The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ,
Moves on: nor all thy Piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
Nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.
-
Omar Khayyám (
Fitzgerald translation)
The psychological arrow of time is thought to be reducible to the thermodynamic arrow: it has deep connections with
Maxwell's demon and the physics of information; In fact, it's easy to understand its link to the
Second Law of Thermodynamics if we view memory as correlation between brain cells (or computer bits) and the outer world. Since the Second Law of Thermodynamics is equivalent to the growth with time of such
correlations, then it states that memory will be created as we move towards the future (rather than towards the past).
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