taylrl3
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I'm just wondering how a photon can move if it does not experience the passage of time?
powerplayer said:when we observe photons are we observing them with no time?
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wouldn't a photon appear to be frozen in time to us?
I'm just wondering how a photon can move if it does not experience the passage of time?
"how can anything change if TIME does not pass?".
In the reference frame of the photon t=0 and always will. Therefore it is not the photon which moves but my movement through time which causes it to reach my eye.
so to try to make that clearer, the closer something gets to c the slower time for that thing appears to an observer in a rest frame, so wouldn't a photon appear to be frozen in time to us?
See also this.Fredrik said:For something to actually age, it needs to have an internal structure that can change with time. No elementary particles do, so they can't really age.
For something to really experience the passage of time (or anything else), it needs to be conscious. Things without internal structure certainly can't be conscious.
What we mean when we say that an object or a particle "experiences X" is that in the coordinate system that the standard synchronization procedure associates with the object's world line (or its tangent), some sequence of events is described as "X". That's how the term "experiences" is defined in the context of special and general relativity. The problem is that the standard synchronization procedure doesn't work for null geodesics, i.e. for the curves that can be world lines of massless particles. So the term "experiences" is undefined for photons.