Nothing. the speed of light is a scalar constant. Space can't expand however without creating energy. If it is true that energy can not be created or destroyed, then space can't change, expand or contract.
The expansion of space causes light passing through it to experience redshift. This means that the wavelength of the light gets stretched out, making it appear more redshifted than its original color.
Yes, light can travel through open space. Light does not require a medium to propagate, so it can move through the vacuum of space without any obstacles.
Light travels fastest in a vacuum, such as in space. It slows down when passing through different mediums like air, water, and glass due to interactions with atoms and molecules in those materials, which cause the light to refract and bend.
Light travels best through empty space because there are no particles to absorb or scatter the light. In contrast, matter can diminish the speed and intensity of light as it interacts with particles and undergoes absorption and scattering.
The light from Polaris travels through space in the form of electromagnetic energy, specifically as visible light.
Light can bend when passing through different mediums with varying densities, due to a change in the speed of light. Light can also bend when it travels near massive objects like stars or black holes, due to the distortion of space-time caused by gravity.
Relativity theory establishes a speed limit for objects travelling through space - but the expansion of the universe is the expansion of space. There is no speed limit for that expansion.
The speed of light is a constant in a vacuum and does not change, regardless of the medium it passes through.
Perfusion - passing of a fluid through space
Meteor
this is called a meteor.
this is called a meteor.
Light can travel through space. All the light that we get on the earth's surface; usually travels from the sun through space before it can reach here.
1. - It is refracted (bent) relative to the source. 2. - The spectrum is separated, the amount depending on the thickness and curvature. 3. - A small part of the light is reflected off the lens, not passing through it. 4. - Assuming a 'perfect' regular (convex) lens, all light passing through the lens focuses at a single point in space, (focal point). 5. - Any image passing through the lens is reversed, equidistant from the focal point.
Light travels through two things: either empty space, or space which contains transparent materials. Some paterials are only partially transparent or translucent, in which case some light does travel through it, but not all the light will get through.
No, you cannot see a beam of light in space. In order for light to be visible, it needs to interact with matter and be scattered or absorbed. In the vacuum of space, there is no matter to scatter or absorb the light, so the beam itself would not be visible.
Light can travel through any parts of space, there is no part that it is excluded from.
Sound and Light can travel through space.