Gina Miller wrote:
> So, if we broke the time barrier, would it alter the extent of the
> universe?
No. The most efficient means of traveling into the future is simply to accelerate to relativistic speeds and let time dilation do its job. You will be present for every instant between the now and the then, but your subjective rate of passage will differ from the rest of the universe. If you travel back into the past, well, its already there, or was there. If you create a wormhole into the past you are just following a time-like curve back to an earlier point in the topology. Traveling in reverse from the past end of the wormhole to the future end, well, the topology is already there, you are following a timelike curve to the new surface of the balloon in the future. Its not there now...
-- TANSTAAFL!!! Michael Lorrey, President Lorrey Systems ------------------------------------------------------------ mailto:mike@lorrey.com ------------------------------------------------------------ "A society which trades freedom for some measure of security shall wind up with neither." -----Benjamin Franklin "The tree of Liberty should be watered from time to time with the blood of tyrants and patriots." -----Thomas Jefferson "A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a Free State, the Right of the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." -----US Constitution, 2nd Amendment "You can have my gun when you pry it out of my cold, dead hands..." -----Anonymous "Once we got their guns away from them, taking their money was REAL easy." -----Unknown North Korean Commissar