Time Appears to Have Run Five Times Slower in Early Universe, Supporting Einstein's Relativity Theory
![](https://beehaw.org/pictrs/image/192c1ec6-db24-4fa0-8fca-c2f412ecf3b2.png)
![](https://beehaw.org/pictrs/image/23b10d50-5c1f-45da-be43-07f234fc229b.png)
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Five times slower for us distant observers, regular time (1 second = 1 second) if you're actually there, if I'm understanding this correctly.
Still, difficult to wrap my brain around.
I read through the article and it didn't explain at all how studying quasars determined this. I wonder if there's a better breakdown as to how they were able to ascertain this. I know there's been some major announcements in the field thanks to quasar study so I'm curious as to how this ties into that.
Luckily there’s a preprint of the article on arXiv if you want to read the source material for the article.
My basic summary would be that they have a model for how variable a quasar should be over time, and they can see a difference in that variability depending on the quasar’s redshift, the distance from us. And that difference is right around what we expect from relativity.