How Can a Telescope See the Past?

A telescope can see the past because it looks at light that has traveled a very long way to reach us.

Imagine you're playing catch with your friend who lives far away. When you throw the ball, it takes time to get to them, maybe even a few seconds. If they throw it back, it takes just as long to come back to you. A telescope is like that ball, when it looks at something in space, it's seeing light that started its journey many years ago.

Like a Slow Message

If your friend lives really far away, the message might take even longer to reach them, like if they were on another planet! So when we look at stars with a telescope, we're seeing light that left those stars years, sometimes thousands of years ago. That means we’re looking at how the star looked in the past.

A Telescope is Like a Time Machine

Think of a telescope like a time machine, not for traveling through space, but for going back in time! It shows us what things were like long ago, just by catching light that took a long trip to reach us.

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Examples

  1. A light beam from a star takes years to reach Earth, so when we see it, we're seeing that star as it was long ago.
  2. Imagine sending a message in a bottle across the ocean; by the time it arrives, it's already old news.
  3. You can think of telescopes like mailboxes for messages from faraway stars.

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