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SeventhSigma
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Do photons experience "instant" lifetimes?
So we know that, for instance, the Andromeda Galaxy is about 2 million lightyears away. That means that from an observer on Earth, we would watch a photon take 2 million years to actually reach that galaxy.
But if we're the photon itself, would it actually feel "instant"? According to the gamma factor in t = T*(1-v^2/c^2)^.5, when you move at c, t = 0, which means that no matter how long a stationary observer has to "wait" for us to cross a particular distance, we experience it as instant -- is this correct?
Would the light from the Big Bang, therefore, experience instant life followed by instant death at the end of our universe assuming it does not change its speed at any point?
So we know that, for instance, the Andromeda Galaxy is about 2 million lightyears away. That means that from an observer on Earth, we would watch a photon take 2 million years to actually reach that galaxy.
But if we're the photon itself, would it actually feel "instant"? According to the gamma factor in t = T*(1-v^2/c^2)^.5, when you move at c, t = 0, which means that no matter how long a stationary observer has to "wait" for us to cross a particular distance, we experience it as instant -- is this correct?
Would the light from the Big Bang, therefore, experience instant life followed by instant death at the end of our universe assuming it does not change its speed at any point?