Exploring the edge of physics: spacetime, causality, and quantum reality
Wormholes are theoretical shortcuts through spacetime, emerging from Einstein’s equations. They connect distant regions like a tunnel through space.
Black holes mathematically contain wormhole-like structures, but:
Wormholes don’t break the speed of light—they shorten distance instead.
You move normally, but spacetime itself is curved.
The problem:
If one end of a wormhole experiences time differently, it could create a time offset.
Show paradoxes ↓
Many physicists believe quantum effects would destroy any system before time travel occurs.
Sending information back in time is just as problematic as sending objects.
Quantum physics allows strange correlations, but:
Even a single bit of information traveling to the past could break causality.
Some theories suggest spacetime and gravity emerge from quantum information.
Possible explanations for why time travel is blocked:
The universe allows strange structures—but prevents rewriting history.