by rmulanax » Sat Aug 04, 2007 5:13 pm
Thank you both for your responses and observations and it has helped me to grasp a slightly better understanding of these things but I'm afraid I'm still hopelessly befuddled and I haven't even had a drink.
When I think about it, I’m not sure we can ever see or realize anything in absolute real time. Even up close, there must be a teeny tiny slight delay in the time it takes, not only for the light to reach our eyes, but also for the reaction time it takes our brains to analyze what we’re looking at and then to translate the information so that we recognize what we see….or at least for us to realize that we’re seeing something whether we actually recognize it or not.
But back to the nebula! I'm still stuck so please bear with me for a moment. If we could somehow see edge-on the space between the actual nebula and where we are at any given moment….couldn’t the traveling light be likened to a series of frames? Not too much unlike movie frames on film. Each frame would present a slightly earlier or later image of the original object, depending on which end of the spectrum we’re on.
I have no idea what the actual numbers might be (or probably even what I'm talking about) but to drastically simplify, let’s say that there are 700 frames between Helix Nebula and ourselves. If we’re looking at the object with our naked eye, we’re probably only able to see the last frame to reach us (the one that took seven hundred light years to get here). But let’s say our most powerful telescope can see through the first 100 frames. Then wouldn't we be seeing the nebula as it appeared only six hundred light years ago? Maybe not? I don’t know. I guess at those great distances, there’s still a time delay based on the speed of light and relative movement of the objects, including our own planet, as we move through space, that would have to be factored into the formula.
Thank you both for your responses and observations and it has helped me to grasp a slightly better understanding of these things but I'm afraid I'm still hopelessly befuddled and I haven't even had a drink. :?
When I think about it, I’m not sure we can ever see or realize anything in absolute real time. Even up close, there must be a teeny tiny slight delay in the time it takes, not only for the light to reach our eyes, but also for the reaction time it takes our brains to analyze what we’re looking at and then to translate the information so that we recognize what we see….or at least for us to realize that we’re seeing something whether we actually recognize it or not.
But back to the nebula! I'm still stuck so please bear with me for a moment. If we could somehow see edge-on the space between the actual nebula and where we are at any given moment….couldn’t the traveling light be likened to a series of frames? Not too much unlike movie frames on film. Each frame would present a slightly earlier or later image of the original object, depending on which end of the spectrum we’re on.
I have no idea what the actual numbers might be (or probably even what I'm talking about) but to drastically simplify, let’s say that there are 700 frames between Helix Nebula and ourselves. If we’re looking at the object with our naked eye, we’re probably only able to see the last frame to reach us (the one that took seven hundred light years to get here). But let’s say our most powerful telescope can see through the first 100 frames. Then wouldn't we be seeing the nebula as it appeared only six hundred light years ago? Maybe not? I don’t know. I guess at those great distances, there’s still a time delay based on the speed of light and relative movement of the objects, including our own planet, as we move through space, that would have to be factored into the formula.