The photon does have a lifespan?

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Photons are created and can be considered "alive" until they interact with particles like electrons or positrons, leading to their absorption and subsequent rebirth when energy levels change. The oldest photons measured originate from the farthest reaches of the observable universe, having traveled billions of years without showing signs of aging. Observational evidence suggests that these ancient photons are indistinguishable from newly generated ones, indicating no inherent lifespan. A photon may be deemed "dead" if its wavelength exceeds the observable universe's radius, but this scenario has not yet occurred. Ultimately, the absorption of a photon relates to energy rather than its wavelength or the universe's size.
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it is born.
 
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artevolved said:
it is born.

It 'lives' until it runs into an electron or a positron, then it 'dies', to be 'reborn' again when the electron (or positron) falls back to a lower energy level and 'gives birth' to the photon.
 
The "oldest" photons we measure have come to us from the most distant edge of the "observable universe". They have traveled for billions of years. (google "observable universe") So far as we can tell those photons are identical to newly generated photons. So, the observational evidence is that there seems to be no limited lifespan of a photon.
 
Bobbywhy said:
The "oldest" photons we measure have come to us from the most distant edge of the "observable universe". They have traveled for billions of years. (google "observable universe") So far as we can tell those photons are identical to newly generated photons. So, the observational evidence is that there seems to be no limited lifespan of a photon.

I'd think a photon could be considered "dead" when it has red shifted to the point that its wavelength is greater then the radius of the observable universe. At that point we could never receive the entire wave. Granted that the universe is not old enough for that to have happened yet.
 
'As far as the photon is concerned', no time has elapsed, despite the fact that we see it as having traveled for billions of years.
 
Absorption of a photon is a question of energy, not wavelength. The two are related, of course, but I don't see how the size of the universe matters
 

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