<p><BR/>Replying to:<BR/><DIV CLASS='Discussion_PostQuote'>Hello I was just wondering what were some god reliable sources for Time Travel studies and information. I realize the field is pretty much career suicide for most "established" scientist but I am still interested. I love the work of Michio Kaku and Neil Degrassi-Tyson but I would like to be subjected to other scientists and opinions. I am 19.. Just incase some good material was made before my time (and im sure there is) also what is practical to take now for this? For most people it is just a hobby or theories. There does not appear to be a one set location or job that works on the aspects of time travel like a field of astronomy or physics. Well thanks for the help. <br />Posted by RonMaverick</DIV></p><p>It is not a field in and of itself so you won't find a "set location", and anyone working solely on time travel is probably in the welfare line. If there is possibility of such a thing, and there does not seem to be at this point, the details would come out of a study of general relativity. You will find some discussion of the potential for time travel in Kip Thorne/s book <em>Black Holes and Time Warps, Einstein's Outrageous Legacy.</em> Thorne is a serious physicist -- the Feynman Professor of Physics at Cal Tech. The book is written for a general audience and does not assume much background.</p><p>If want to get really serioius, the classic modern text on general relativity is <em>Gravitation </em>by Charles Misner, Kip Thorne, and John Archibald Wheeler. Wheeler was an astonishing physicist, and Misner and Thorne studied with him. Wheeler was also Richard Feynman's thesis advisor. He died just a couple of weeks ago at the age of 96, still pursuing physics research. If you are 19, and at the usual level in your study of mathematics you might find <em>Gravitation</em> rather hard going. You might also be iinterested in Wheeler's autobiographical book <em>Geons, Black Holes and Quantum Foam.</em></p><p> </p> <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> </div>