In physics and fiction, a wormhole is a hypothetical topological feature of spacetime that would be,
fundamentally, a "shortcut" through spacetime. For a simple visual explanation of a
wormhole, consider spacetime
visualized as a two-dimensional (2-D) surface (see illustration, right). If this
surface is "folded" along a (non-existent) third dimension, it allows one to
picture a wormhole "bridge". (Please note, though, that this image is merely a
visualization displayed to convey an essentially unvisualisable structure
existing in 4 or more dimensions. The parts of the wormhole could be
higher-dimensional analogues for the parts of the curved 2D surface; for
example, instead of mouths which are circular holes in a 2D plane, a real
wormhole's mouths could be spheres in 3D space.) A wormhole is, in theory, much
like a tunnel with two ends each in separate points in space-time.
There is no observational evidence for wormholes, but on a theoretical level
there are valid solutions to the equations of the theory of general
relativity which contain wormholes. The first type of wormhole solution
discovered was the Schwarzschild wormhole which would be present in the
Schwarzschild
metric describing an eternal black hole, but it was found that this type of
wormhole would collapse too quickly for anything to cross from one end to the
other. Wormholes which could actually be crossed, known as traversable
wormholes, would only be possible if exotic matter with negative energy density could
be used to stabilize them (many physicists believe that the Casimir effect is
evidence that negative energy densities are possible in nature). Physicists have
also not found any natural process which would be predicted to form a wormhole
naturally in the context of general relativity, although the quantum foam hypothesis is
sometimes used to suggest that tiny wormholes might appear and disappear
spontaneously at the Planck
scale. It
has also been proposed that if a tiny wormhole held open by a negative-mass cosmic string had appeared
around the time of the Big Bang,
it could have been inflated to macroscopic size by cosmic
inflation The basic notion of an intra-universe wormhole is that it is a compact region of spacetime whose boundary is
topologically trivial but whose interior is not simply connected.
Formalizing this idea leads to definitions such as the following, taken from
Matt Visser's Lorentzian Wormholes.
Characterizing inter-universe wormholes is more difficult. For example, one
can imagine a 'baby' universe connected to its 'parent' by a narrow 'umbilicus'.
One might like to regard the umbilicus as the throat of a wormhole, but the
spacetime is simply connected. Lorentzian wormholes known as Schwarzschild wormholes or
Einstein-Rosen bridges are bridges between areas of space that can be
modeled as vacuum
solutions to the Einstein field equations, and which
are now understood to be intrinsic parts of the maximally
extended version of the Schwarzschild metric describing an eternal
black hole with no charge and
no rotation. Here, "maximally extended" refers to the idea that the spacetime
should not have any "edges": for any possible trajectory of a free-falling
particle (following a geodesic) in the spacetime, it
should be possible to continue this path arbitrarily far into the particle's
future or past, unless the trajectory hits a gravitational singularity like the
one at the center of the black hole's interior. In order to satisfy this
requirement, it turns out that in addition to the black hole interior region
which particles enter when they fall through the event horizon from the outside, there must be a
separate white hole interior
region which allows us to extrapolate the trajectories of particles which an
outside observer sees rising up away from the event horizon. And just as
there are two separate interior regions of the maximally extended spacetime,
there are also two separate exterior regions, sometimes called two different
"universes", with the second universe allowing us to extrapolate some possible
particle trajectories in the two interior regions. This means that the interior
black hole region can contain a mix of particles that fell in from either
universe (and thus an observer who fell in from one universe might be able to
see light that fell in from the other one), and likewise particles from the
interior white hole region can escape into either universe. All four regions can
be seen in a spacetime diagram which uses Kruskal–Szekeres
coordinates, as discussed and illustrated on the page White Holes and Wormholes.
In this spacetime, it is possible to come up with coordinate systems such
that if you pick a hypersurface of constant time (a set of points that all have
the same time coordinate, such that every point on the surface has a space-like
separation, giving what is called a 'space-like surface') and draw an "embedding
diagram" depicting the curvature of space at that time (see the discussion of
embedding diagrams on this
page), the embedding diagram will look like a tube connecting the two
exterior regions, known as an "Einstein-Rosen bridge". For example, see the
diagrams on this
page which show the maximally extended Schwarzschild solution in
Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates along with white hypersurfaces of constant time
drawn on (time in some other coordinate system besides Kruskal–Szekeres
coordinates, since a hypersurface of constant Kruskal–Szekeres time would just
look like a horizontal line when drawn in a Kruskal–Szekeres diagram), and the
corresponding embedding diagram for that hypersurface. Note that the
Schwarzschild metric describes an idealized black hole that exists eternally
from the perspective of external observers; a more realistic black hole that
forms at some particular time from a collapsing star would require a different
metric. When the infalling stellar matter is added to a diagram of a black
hole's history, it removes the part of the diagram corresponding to the white
hole interior region, along with the part of the diagram corresponding to the
other universe.
The Einstein-Rosen bridge was discovered by Albert Einstein and his colleague Nathan Rosen, who first
published the result in 1935. However, in 1962 John A. Wheeler and Robert W. Fuller
published a paper showing that this type of wormhole is unstable, and that it
will pinch off too quickly for light (or any particle moving slower than light)
that falls in from one exterior region to make it to the other exterior
region.
Before the stability problems of Schwarzschild wormholes were apparent, it
was proposed that quasars were white
holes forming the ends of wormholes of this type.
While Schwarzschild wormholes are not traversable, their existence inspired
Kip Thorne to imagine
traversable wormholes created by holding the 'throat' of a Schwarzschild
wormhole open with exotic
matter (material that has negative mass/energy).
Lorentzian traversable wormholes would allow travel from one part of the
universe to another part of that same universe very quickly or would allow
travel from one universe to another. The possibility of traversable wormholes in
general relativity was first demonstrated by Kip Thorne and his graduate student Mike
Morris in a 1988 paper; for this reason, the type of traversable wormhole
they proposed, held open by a spherical shell of exotic matter, is referred to as a
Morris-Thorne wormhole. Later, other types of traversable wormholes were
discovered as allowable solutions to the equations of general relativity,
including a variety analyzed in a 1989 paper by Matt Visser, in which a path through the wormhole
can be made in which the traversing path does not pass through a region of
exotic matter. However in the pure Gauss-Bonnet theory (a modification to
general relativity involving extra spatial dimensions which is sometimes studied
in the context of brane
cosmology) exotic matter is not needed in order for wormholes to exist- they
can exist even with no matter. A type held open by
negative mass cosmic
strings was put forth by Visser in collaboration with Cramer et al., in
which it was proposed that such wormholes could have been naturally created in
the early universe.
Wormholes connect two points in spacetime, which means that they would in principle
allow travel in time, as
well as in space. In 1988, Morris, Thorne and Yurtsever worked out explicitly
how to convert a wormhole traversing space into one traversing time. However,
according to general relativity it would not be possible to use a wormhole to
travel back to a time earlier than when the wormhole was first converted into a
time machine by accelerating one of its two mouths
The impossibility of faster-than-light relative speed only applies locally.
Wormholes allow superluminal (faster-than-light) travel by ensuring that
the speed of light is not exceeded locally at any time. While traveling through
a wormhole, subluminal (slower-than-light) speeds are used. If two points are
connected by a wormhole, the time taken to traverse it would be less than the
time it would take a light beam to make the journey if it took a path through
the space outside the wormhole. However, a light beam traveling through
the wormhole would always beat the traveler. As an analogy, running around to
the opposite side of a mountain at maximum speed may take longer than walking
through a tunnel crossing it.
The theory of general relativity predicts that if traversable wormholes
exist, they could allow time
travel. This
would be accomplished by accelerating one end of the wormhole to a high velocity
relative to the other, and then sometime later bringing it back; relativistic time dilation would result
in the accelerated wormhole mouth aging less than the stationary one as seen by
an external observer, similar to what is seen in the twin paradox. However, time connects differently
through the wormhole than outside it, so that synchronized clocks at each mouth will
remain synchronized to someone traveling through the wormhole itself, no matter
how the mouths move around. This means
that anything which entered the accelerated wormhole mouth would exit the
stationary one at a point in time prior to its entry.
For example, consider two clocks at both mouths both showing the date as
2000. After being taken on a trip at relativistic velocities, the accelerated
mouth is brought back to the same region as the stationary mouth with the
accelerated mouth's clock reading 2005 while the stationary mouth's clock read
2010. A traveller who entered the accelerated mouth at this moment would exit
the stationary mouth when its clock also read 2005, in the same region but now
five years in the past. Such a configuration of wormholes would allow for a
particle's world line to form
a closed loop in spacetime, known as a closed timelike curve.
It is thought that it may not be possible to convert a wormhole into a time
machine in this manner; the predictions are made in the context of general
relativity, but general relativity does not include quantum effects. Some
analyses using the semiclassical approach to incorporating
quantum effects into general relativity indicate that a feedback loop of virtual particles
would circulate through the wormhole with ever-increasing intensity, destroying
it before any information could be passed through it, in keeping with the chronology protection
conjecture. This has been called into question by the suggestion that
radiation would disperse after traveling through the wormhole, therefore
preventing infinite accumulation. The debate on this matter is described by Kip S. Thorne in the book Black
Holes and Time Warps, and a more technical discussion can be found in The
quantum physics of chronology protection by Matt Visser. There is also the Roman ring, which is a
configuration of more than one wormhole. This ring seems to allow a closed time
loop with stable wormholes when analyzed using semiclassical gravity, although
without a full theory of quantum gravity it is uncertain whether the
semiclassical approach is reliable in this case.
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