What is time?
In the simplistic (and incompetent) way my teacher described it, time is "the ticking of clocks."
Is it absolute?
No. Time intervals are relative to velocity and gravitational acceleration.
What does "simultaneity" mean?
When two
events occur at the same time. "Simultanious" is a relative term. One oberver could accurately conclude that two events occured at the same time, but another observer at a different location (or under a different velocity/acceleration) might not agree.
Is time travel possible?
Yes. Since time is relative to velocity, someone traveling at 99.99% the speed of light for a year could deaccelerate and come back to a world that had progressed much further than a year. I've sort of forgotten the equations to figure out the exact time it would have been, but I'm sure I'll soon be reminded (college/you
).
Is time travel just "theoretically" possible but impractical to consider, or would it be easy to do?
At the moment, it's wholly impractical. Rockets travel nowhere near to the speed of light. I suppose if they traveled at top speed for a really, really long time the time descrepancy would grow, but that's impractical since its fuel is limited and the lives of the people opperating the rocket are limited.
When we discover a way to travel faster (near light speed), then yes, it'd be easy to do. Of course, you'd have to allow a long time for acceleration...
I read something that if a craft were to undergo Earth's gravetational acceleration (9.8 m/s^2 in free space), it would take about a year to get to 90% the speed of light. The memory is hazy, so it could probably use some correction.
Do velocities add -- for example, if a train is going 10 m/s wrt the ground, and a ball on the train is going 5 m/s wrt the train, is the ball going 15 m/s wrt the ground?
Yes, unless you're dealing with light.
Does mass change with velocity?
Yes. Since energy and mass are equivilant (E=mc^2) and velocity carries energy, the higher the velocity of an object, the more energy it carries. Since this is true, the amount of mass it carries also grows.
If we were in a ship's cabin going at a constant velocity, would we be able to conduct any kind of physical experiment that would reveal we are moving? For example, would the results of any experiment be different inside a ship's cabin than it would be on "static" ground?
No.