What is the maximum speed that time can flow? If time stops at the speed of light, how fast would it then go at an absolute speed of 0? You aren't rotating with a planet or galaxy, etc. Would you instantly die as all of time happened?
>speed = rate of change with respect to time
>what is the maximum rate of change with respect to time that time can flow?
>>8706431
Yes definitely
>>8706431
Time is a change in any state of any matter in the universe. Traveling at a higher speed or dropping to absolute 0 in changes in distance don't do anything when your body changes relative to itself. And if you found a way to stop that, you'd be frozen and likely dead.
>>8706444
Neat, thx
>>8706431
>What is the maximum speed that time can flow?
Roughly 1 second per second.
>>8706454
nah m8 it is 1 year per year
>>8706458
GTFO with your metric shit, this is Murca.
>>8706431
>Would you instantly die as all of time happened?
Thats the stupidest thing ive ever read here. For you your life wouldnt pass faster like other people traveling at the speed of life wouldnt life forever. Watch a couple of documentaries about relativism before getting in here.
>>8706431
Time doesn't flow, it's not a vector.
>>8706431
>maximum speed that time can flow?
Wrong concept.
If there are no events, (not even a single particle moving in relation to any other particle) then time stops. Arguably this is the case only in a singularity. (before a big bang) Why is this not a stable state? Is it even possible for more than one particles to exist and there not being events?
Time is a relative distance. It has no speed. Although humans need measurement to point out situations, nature does not. Therefor time travel is impossible, but mostly just understood wrong. It's a philosophical expression. Again, nature does not care for human logic.
Isn't the real question just about where the least deep gravity well is, and what the relative time dilation is there? Somewhere out in the farthest reach between galaxies, I presume. I don't expect the difference to be much at all, though.