18 December 2003, BBC two: Time Trip – transcript Citat: "...Prof RICHARD GOTT: If the cosmic strings moved rapidly enough but still slower than the speed of light, the solution was sufficiently twisted so that you could start here, circle the two cosmic strings whilst they were passing and come back to an event in your own past...You could leave Planet B at noon here and travel over here to arrive back at Planet A at noon. In fact you could arrive back in time to shake hands with your younger self and wish yourself a nice trip around the cosmic string...Prof RICHARD GOTT: So that makes a time machine...", backup
news.bbc.co.uk
17 June, 2005, BBC News: New model 'permits time travel' Citat: "...It is as if, in some strange way, the present takes account of all the possible routes back into the past and, because your father is certainly alive, none of the routes back can possibly lead to his death...", backup
ias.edu
sns.ias.edu
J. Richard Gott, III – Time Travel Citat: "...Did you know that we have already traveled in time?...J.Richard Gott, III, a professor of astrophysics at Princeton University is one of the leading cosmologists of our time...", backup
princeton.edu
November 14, 2001, Princeton University: Time travel: Truth not always stranger than science fiction Citat: "..."We have had time travelers already," Gott said in an interview at his Peyton Hall office. "The greatest time traveler so far is (cosmonaut) Sergei Avdeyev, who, by virtue of being on space flights for 748 days, is one-fiftieth of a second younger than if he had stayed home. So that man has traveled one-fiftieth of a second into the future."...Regarding time travel into the past, Gott said it may be possible, but much more difficult...", backup
November 14, 2001, Princeton University: Time travel: Truth not always stranger than science fiction Citat: "..."We have had time travelers already," Gott said in an interview at his Peyton Hall office. "The greatest time traveler so far is (cosmonaut) Sergei Avdeyev, who, by virtue of being on space flights for 748 days, is one-fiftieth of a second younger than if he had stayed home. So that man has traveled one-fiftieth of a second into the future."...Regarding time travel into the past, Gott said it may be possible, but much more difficult...", backup
18 December 2003, BBC two: Time Trip – transcript Citat: "...Prof RICHARD GOTT: If the cosmic strings moved rapidly enough but still slower than the speed of light, the solution was sufficiently twisted so that you could start here, circle the two cosmic strings whilst they were passing and come back to an event in your own past...You could leave Planet B at noon here and travel over here to arrive back at Planet A at noon. In fact you could arrive back in time to shake hands with your younger self and wish yourself a nice trip around the cosmic string...Prof RICHARD GOTT: So that makes a time machine...", backup
September 2002 issue, Scientific American: How to Build a Time Machine. It wouldn't be easy, but it might be possible Citat: "...Even at aircraft speeds, the time dilation in a typical journey amounts to just a few nanoseconds...atomic clocks are accurate enough to record the shift and confirm that time really is stretched by motion. So travel into the future is a proved fact, even if it has so far been in rather unexciting amounts...Gravity is another. In his general theory of relativity, Einstein predicted that gravity slows time. Clocks run a bit faster in the attic than in the basement..."
J. Richard Gott, III – Time Travel Citat: "...Did you know that we have already traveled in time?...J.Richard Gott, III, a professor of astrophysics at Princeton University is one of the leading cosmologists of our time...", backup
17 June, 2005, BBC News: New model 'permits time travel' Citat: "...It is as if, in some strange way, the present takes account of all the possible routes back into the past and, because your father is certainly alive, none of the routes back can possibly lead to his death...", backup