Does light lose energy as it crosses the universe? The answer involves time dilation.

The speed of light is the fastest anything can travel. What happens to a photon from a galaxy 25 million light years away on its journey toward Earth?

An abstract illustration of rays of colorful light
Light, whether from a star or your flashlight, travels at 186,000 miles per second. 
(Image credit: Artur Debat/Moment via Getty Images)

My telescope, set up for astrophotography in my light-polluted San Diego backyard, was pointed at a galaxy unfathomably far from Earth. My wife, Cristina, walked up just as the first space photo streamed to my tablet. It sparkled on the screen in front of us.

"That's the Pinwheel galaxy," I said. The name is derived from its shape – albeit this pinwheel contains about a trillion stars.

Jarred Roberts
Project Scientist, University of California, San Diego

Dr. Jarred Roberts is a high-energy astrophysics instrumentation developer contributing to experiments like Compton Spectrometer and Imager (COSI), Strobe-X and the Advanced Particle-astrophysics Telescope (APT). He has played key roles in electronics design, detector integration and software development for space and balloon-based missions.

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