A computer program for simulating time travel and a possible 'solution' for the grandfather paradox
This work addresses the challenge of simulating time travel for researchers and enthusiasts, though it is incremental as it applies existing computational methods to a new domain.
The authors tackled the problem of exploring time travel and the grandfather paradox by developing a computational model and computer program for digital time travel, resulting in scenarios that provide consistent solutions to the paradox.
While the possibility of time travel in physics is still debated, the explosive growth of virtual-reality simulations opens up new possibilities to rigorously explore such time travel and its consequences in the digital domain. Here we provide a computational model of time travel and a computer program that allows exploring digital time travel. In order to explain our method we formalize a simplified version of the famous grandfather paradox, show how the system can allow the participant to go back in time, try to kill their ancestors before they were born, and experience the consequences. The system has even come up with scenarios that can be considered consistent "solutions" of the grandfather paradox. We discuss the conditions for digital time travel, which indicate that it has a large number of practical applications.