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this post was submitted on 20 Nov 2023
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As I understand it, if you were a photon this trip would be instantaneous from your perspective due to time dilation. You emit from the event, you collide with and energize some particle billions of light years away at the same exact moment.
But what if you never hit anything? Do you experience time then? Seems that no collision is likely in a mostly empty, but finite universe.
Or perhaps the universe is infinite, making it a certainty that you hit something eventually. In that case every photon hits something, almost implying a conservation of photons.
I thought that was interesting to ponder…
Every golfer knows that trees are 90% air, and yet the chance of a golf ball passing through one without hitting anything is demonstrably zero.
I've more or less understood the universe as the finite (yet infinitely expanding) region of space that encompasses the bubble of matter that the big bang created. There may be an actual border between pure empty space and our universe similar to the skin of a drop of water. This skin could absorb particles/energy (like a photon) where it could somehow convert it somehow to allow this skin to continue growing and/or re-emit it elsewhere within the bubble.
(bear in mind this is just an understanding gathered from the numerous space documentaries I've watched and not from a text book, so I may be way off)