Comment by tridentboy

Comment by tridentboy 4 days ago

4 replies

First set gamma as being 1/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2), with "c" being the speed of light. The factor for time dilation and distance contraction in special relativity is gamma and 1/gamma respectively.

That means that when you get to speeds equal to c, your time runs infinitely slower and the distances are infinitely shorter. So if your clock is infinitely slower, so every travel at "c" speeds means that no time passes for you. And if your distances are infinitely shorter, all travels at "c" speeds cover any distance as immediate. So you could reach every point of the universe as if it was immediately closer and in no time at all.

So in the frame of reference of the photon, the moment it is created it has already reached its destination, be it wherever it is on the universe.

Of course we can never reach "c" as beings with mass, but we can get closer to that. So for example if you get to 99.99999999999999% of the speed of light, you could travel a distance of 54,794,520 ly and only one year would pass to you, while 54,794,520 years would pass on earth.

dbetteridge 4 days ago

Follow up question from someone who's mostly forgotten his university physics.

Do photons actually exist, in the traditional sense of physical matter.

Or are they just a convenient short hand to describe the transfer of energy via waves in the fabric or space time, if they dont experience the universe when passing through it but only when interacting with matter and matters "dents" in space-time.

  • svachalek 3 days ago

    As a non-physicist, my understanding is that they actually exist, but can't be thought of as flying around like ping pong balls. I think it's one of those things that comes down to interpretation though, where the math is very clear but how you think of what it "means" lies beyond science.

    • dbetteridge 3 days ago

      Went on a slight rabbit hole reading after posting this and seems like we're all just excitations in a stack of quantum fields :-D