Looking into space is like looking back in time because light takes time to travel.
Imagine you have a friend who lives 10 blocks away. When they wave at you, it takes a little while for you to see their wave, maybe about 1 second. Now imagine your friend is on the other side of town, and they send you a message. It might take longer for that message to reach you.
Light works the same way! When we look at stars or galaxies in space, we’re seeing light that has been traveling through space for years, sometimes even millions of years. So when we look up at the night sky, we're not just looking at faraway objects, we're also looking at how they looked a long time ago.
How Light Helps Us Travel Through Time
Think of light as a letter being sent from a star to Earth. If the star is very far away, it takes that letter a long time to get here. When we finally read the letter (or see the light), we’re seeing the past of that star.
This is called the time it takes for light to travel, and scientists use this idea to learn about how the universe looked in its early days, like watching a movie that's been playing for billions of years!
Examples
- A child sees a star that actually shone 100 years ago.
- Light from the Sun takes about 8 minutes to reach Earth.
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See also
- How Does The Geometry of Causality Work?
- How Does A Comet is Born - Ask a Spaceman! Work?
- How Does 12 vs 24 Hour Clock - Functional Skills Work?
- How Big Can Black Holes Grow?
- How does Britain know what time it is?