Prague said:
This is very interesting, bare with me I do not know if I will be able to successfully express my thoughts.
Ok, so we have a guy 4.5 billion light years away looking at the Earth through a high (very high) powered telescope. Now, Earth (present) will be point A, the man Point B. The Earth at present time is C and the light of the Earth which is 4.5 billion years away from Earth is D.
C and D arent analogous quantities, I don't understand what your getting at.
Questions:
If B is at the same position as D why would he need a high powered telescope to view earth? (I have some sort of answer, I suppose that the light is just a continuous image, so it shows the Earth still 4.5 billion light years away so you would need to magnify it, correct?)
Thats the thing, it takes 4.5 billion years for the light to get from A to B. They are both existing at the same time, but B won't know what happens at A until 4.5billion years pass.
If he was able to magnify it so he could see say a volcano on Earth how is this possible? After all it's light that is moving not the volcano. Does this means that everything is simply a form of light? At this moment a snapshot of me is being sent out into space at 186,000 miles a second?
The same reason you can see the volcano. Just because light is traveling a lot farther doesn't change anything about what information its conveying. No, not everything is a form of light. Let's simplify a volcano to a green sheet of paper. Green paper absorbs all colors of light and emits green light. So when light strikes the paper and goes towards your eyes, it has the frequency corresponding to the color green. What you will see is the a region in space that is emitting green light, from there its up to your brain to determine other things such as texture, depth, etc. Now if you are standing 10m away or 10000000000000000000000000000000000m away, green is green. That light is green, and it will be green until it reflects off of something else. Hopefully that's easier to see.
(this next one is just an absolute sci-fi question, I am not sure why I am even bother asking it.)
If this light emits the image of everything, would it be possible to travel within the light? This is how I view all the questions I am asking, a snapshot of a second is taken and it then begins traveling through space at the speed of light, if you view this "light image" you see what was happening at that present time. Now could you ever go in that "light image?" I suppose if you could, time travel, atleast to the past would be possible, although we could never catch up with Earth's "light images" we would have to be traveling the speed of light and even at that speed the image of a second before us will always remain a second before us. (odd, now i understand the twin paradox and the time dilation, glad i asked this odd question now. so, time stops when you travel the speed of light?)
Its interesting but your conception of light is incorrect. Light travels in a spherical shape, so the green paper for example (lets assume its a spherical paper for now) emits green light in all directions. Whether YOU see it or not, doesn't affect whether it was emitted. However, this light is just a reflection of what was there over time, in a certain sense, yes it is a photograph, and this is linked very closely to how the basics of photography work.
Just try to picture someone standing next to you waving at you, what your eyes get is a stream of photons each at a different frequency depending on the color of light emitted from a certain region infront of you. Their hand is brown let's say, since the hand is moving you'll see brown light coming from different regions inthe space infront of you. Your brain will identify this as an 'object' and focus it. However that's not all you see, you get a lot of ambient light from things around you like the sky, buildings, everything. Now this light is transmitted in every direction from the source, not just straight at you. Light doesn't know you are there.