Civil_Willingness298
Civil_Willingness298 t1_jcnpz88 wrote
Reply to comment by mysteryofthefieryeye in Where do photons go if they've been emitted but are destined to never be absorbed, and would these photons traveling ad infinitum define the edge of the universe (even if space itself were still larger)? by mysteryofthefieryeye
No, it is scientific fact. https://phys.org/news/2014-05-does-light-experience-time.amp
Civil_Willingness298 t1_jcnoq2r wrote
Reply to Where do photons go if they've been emitted but are destined to never be absorbed, and would these photons traveling ad infinitum define the edge of the universe (even if space itself were still larger)? by mysteryofthefieryeye
Photons do not experience space or time. It reaches its destination 13 billion light years away or two inches away at the same exact moment it departs. Let that cook your noodle for a minute or two.
Civil_Willingness298 t1_jcnq7p7 wrote
Reply to comment by mysteryofthefieryeye in Where do photons go if they've been emitted but are destined to never be absorbed, and would these photons traveling ad infinitum define the edge of the universe (even if space itself were still larger)? by mysteryofthefieryeye
It is the extreme end of time dilation. Well accepted physics for a century.