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Pasting the abstract from the paper:

The theory of general relativity predicts the existence of closed time-like curves (CTCs), which theoretically would allow an observer to travel back in time and interact with their past self. This raises the question of whether this could create a grandfather paradox, in which the observer interacts in such a way to prevent their own time travel. Previous research has proposed a framework for deterministic, reversible, dynamics compatible with non-trivial time travel, where observers in distinct regions of spacetime can perform arbitrary local operations with no contradiction arising. However, only scenarios with up to three regions have been fully characterised, revealing only one type of process where the observers can verify to both be in the past and future of each other. Here we extend this characterisation to an arbitrary number of regions and find that there exist several inequivalent processes that can only arise due to non-trivial time travel. This supports the view that complex dynamics is possible in the presence of CTCs, compatible with free choice of local operations and free of inconsistencies.

FWIW, the last sentence of the paper itself (prior to the conclusion) reads: It is an open question how generic is this situation and what are the spacetimes and physical systems for which nontrivial, self-consistent time travel is possible.

As usual, non-scientific reporting overplays the ramifications.

Link to paper: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1361-6382/aba4bc



"Further studies will be necessary to find genuine physical scenarios realising the acausal processes we have discovered."

To bad no one went back in time to tell the authors whether they actually discovered anything or not.


Maybe we just need to wait until someone builds the womhole or the time machine from Primer.




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