To me, the more interesting question is "What happened to the past?"
We can accept as truth that in a closed system, entropy will always increase and not dissipate.
We can also hold as truth that information cannot be destroyed, only changed (made more entropic).
However, one of the features of information conservation is that information about the past is not lost irreparably.
(This was the big spark behind the black hole debates in the 70s.)
Depending on how you look at spacetime, the past and the future are just positions on a mathematical surface, which follows certain rules. This is why you can have such curious things as time being absurdly fast in one part of the universe, and infinitely slow inside others, when compared with a different point in space as a point of observation.
Since this means the concept of "Past", "Present", and "Future" are fuzzy in the greater scheme of things, this implies that traveling to a point that would logically be in the past relative to your own timeline is theoretically possible (But probably practically impossible, and if causality is to be obeyed, such travel would be in the past, but outside your light cone.)
To me, this suggests that "The past" is not "Lost", any more than say, the depressions in the groove of a record are lost, after the needle moves past. Can you play the record backward? Not really. It's not designed that way. Can you play the record over again? Why not?
In this thought experiment, "Time" is the action the spinning turntable has to turn the record underneath the needle. the "Past" is the section of the groove that has already gone under the needle. the "Present" is the ephemeral point directly under the needle, and the "Future" is the portion of the groove yet to pass under the needle. The relative forward velocity of the track under the needle changes as the spiral moves out from the center of the record, even though the turntable is turning at a fixed rate, due to changes in the distance traveled per rotation. This has some curious analogs with the space/time relationship.
In this way, "Time" is a real thing, which has real effects, but since the past is not actually lost, the actual state of the universe (the record) does not change. Our perception of the universe is what changes, as our reference point on the time axis changes, and the rules we observe prevent us from experiencing that axis backwards.
Philosophers HATE this kind of interpretation, because it makes free will into an illusion. I on the other hand, like it-- it means that because I have existed in the past, I will always continue to exist as a past feature of the universe, and depending on the reference from which that universe is observed, I am always existing, and always will exist.