Time machine in Interstellar movie

Time machine in Interstellar movie - Black and Red Digital Device

I've read these Stack Exchange articles and am assuming that Interstellar could be a time travel movie.

Cooper's Time in Space & Time travel in Interstellar explained.

Wikipedia states that,

Time travel is the concept of movement between certain points in time, analogous to movement between different points in space by an object or a person, typically with the use of a hypothetical device known as a time machine.

Can the Massive Tesseract considered as a time machine or in fact are there any time machines used in Interstellar?



Best Answer

The Tesseract, to describe the real thing:

In geometry, the tesseract is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube; the tesseract is to the cube as the cube is to the square. Just as the surface of the cube consists of six square faces, the hypersurface of the tesseract consists of eight cubical cells. The tesseract is one of the six convex regular 4-polytopes.

This for us to look at from our 3d perspective would be like a 2d creature watching a 3d sphere fall through their plane of existence. Time itself is a human construct, but the change of an object is certainly universal.

It would look like nothing, then become a single point which then grows in radius to the final diametre of the sphere, to then finally reducing back down to a point and then nothingness, as such in this animation:

sphere

In the movie 5th dimensional beings have created a 3 dimensional "room/thing" where the 4th dimension (time) is physically represented. As described in this youtube.

To take from the script: (warning pdf)

TARS (over radio) Somewhere. In their fifth dimension. They saved us ...

COOPER (frustrated) Who’s ’They’? And why would they help us?

TARS (over radio) I don’t know, but they constructed this three-dimensional space inside their five-dimensional reality to allow you to understand it ...

COOPER It isn’t working -!

TARS (over radio) Yes, it is. You’ve seen that time is represented here as a physical dimension - you even worked out that you can exert a force across spacetime -

So the Tesseract isn't a time machine as much as it's a "Time Window" of sorts. Small data/Messages can be sent through the device via force, but no physical object can traverse.

This is similarly analogous to someone stuck in a sound proof glass house, you can't directly physically interact with the outside world, but you can go around the house to different windows and breathe on the glass and draw a message of some kind and hope the outside world somewhere understands.




Pictures about "Time machine in Interstellar movie"

Time machine in Interstellar movie - Blurred gear shift against dashboard with buttons and electronic clock in car in daytime
Time machine in Interstellar movie - Electronic clock on dashboard of car
Time machine in Interstellar movie - Young black lady resting on sofa and watching TV at home



Was there time travel in Interstellar?

Christopher Nolan's Interstellar has possibly the best representation of time travel that is shown in any film. But, the question that arises is whether the situation experienced by the lead character could be called time travel at all. However, the film also creates a causal loop that seems self-explanatory.

How did he go back in time in Interstellar?

Originally Answered: How can Cooper go into past is it possible in Interstellar movie? He doesn't go directly into the past. He simply interacts with it buy making changes in the gravitation of the past. Hence sending back data to the past.

Is there a time paradox in Interstellar?

The ending of Interstellar seems to present a \u201cbootstrap paradox.\u201d In short, this is a type of time paradox in which a chicken sends an egg back in time, which egg then becomes that chicken.

How did 23 years pass in Interstellar?

Due to Gargantua's massive gravitational pull, \u201cevery hour on that planet is seven years on Earth\u201d. After a massive tidal wave hits the spacecraft and delays their exit, they find that 23 years have passed on Earth.



Interstellar - The Watch and Closing Tesseract Full Scene




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Pavel Danilyuk, Erik Mclean, Erik Mclean, Andres Ayrton