#club75 || How do we see the past in space??!!!
The nearest star to the Sun, named Proxima Centauri, is 4.1 / 2 light-years away. It has been calculated that if you travel from Earth to the Sun 2 lakh 72 thousand times, you have to travel as much as you have to travel to reach that star. This means that the light of this star that we see sitting on the earth is the light of two light-years past four decimal one. If that star is destroyed, we will see that it is exactly four decimal one-two light-years. But the funny thing is that the star we have seen so far is passed, in fact, the star has disappeared long ago.
And the galaxy that scientists have recently discovered is the oldest galaxy ever discovered. Scientists have used data from the Hubble Space Telescope and the Cake-1 telescope to discover this galaxy. Name of this galaxy (z8_GND_5296). This means that scientists have reached the time closest to the Big Bang by discovering this galaxy. And we will never see this galaxy. Of course, this is not the last frontier of space, and its final boundary is still unknown. So whatever we see in space, nothing is present, everything is past.
Many thanks to the readers who have patiently read this article.
To the attention of @tarpan.
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CC: @chiabertrand
#club75 done!!