How do space telescopes see back in time?

Space telescopes can see faraway stars and galaxies as they were a long time ago, like looking into the past.

Imagine you're playing with your friend who lives across town. When you shout "Hello!" to them, it takes a little time for the sound to reach them, maybe a few seconds. The same thing happens with light: when light from a star travels through space, it takes years, even thousands of years, to get to us.

So when we look at a star that is very far away, we're seeing it as it was when the light started its journey, not how it looks right now. That's like getting a message from your friend that was sent long ago.

How space telescopes help

Space telescopes are like super-powered eyes in space. They can catch very old light that has traveled for billions of years. This lets scientists see what the universe looked like when it was just a baby, maybe even before Earth existed!

It's like having a time machine, but made with mirrors and cameras instead of magic!

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Examples

  1. A space telescope sees a star that's 100 years away, so it shows how the star looked 100 years ago.
  2. Light takes time to travel, so seeing far into space is like looking back in time.
  3. Imagine sending a message on a rocket, if it takes 10 years to reach someone, they receive it 10 years later.

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