- #1
Jesus Rodriguez
- 4
- 0
I'm trying to ask a simple question, which is probably a fatal mistake but...
According to accepted Einsteinian relativity, say I'm traveling at the speed of light. I understand I can't get to that speed. Suppose I was born at that speed, I'm a photon, whatever. From my "photonic perspective" does time pass by? Is it all one big "now", so that from my perspective I'm eternal, or does time merely slow to some finite crawl?
If time does change, even if very slowly, I can understand and have no need of the next question.
If time from the photon's perspective does not change, then how is the perspective of the photon not eternal? In other words, photons are created and destroyed (changed) all the time. Yet if from their perspective time does not change then something does not make sense to me. A particle for which time does not change should have no beginning nor any end.
I'm confused somewhere...
JR
According to accepted Einsteinian relativity, say I'm traveling at the speed of light. I understand I can't get to that speed. Suppose I was born at that speed, I'm a photon, whatever. From my "photonic perspective" does time pass by? Is it all one big "now", so that from my perspective I'm eternal, or does time merely slow to some finite crawl?
If time does change, even if very slowly, I can understand and have no need of the next question.
If time from the photon's perspective does not change, then how is the perspective of the photon not eternal? In other words, photons are created and destroyed (changed) all the time. Yet if from their perspective time does not change then something does not make sense to me. A particle for which time does not change should have no beginning nor any end.
I'm confused somewhere...
JR