Aquila Children's Magazine magnificentMegaMag-92pages | Page 9

CALCULATING THE SPEED OF LIGHT In the 17th century, the Italian astronomer Galileo tried to work out how fast light travels. He asked two people with lanterns to stand on top of neighbouring hills. The first person flashed their lantern and when the second person saw this, they uncovered their lantern too. Using the time between the two flashes, and knowing the distance between the hills, Galileo hoped to calculate the speed of light. Unfortunately, the two hills were less than a mile apart, making the time gap too short to measure. WHAT IS A LIGHT YEAR? USING LIGHT FOR ‘TIME TRAVEL’ In the 1670s, the Danish astronomer Rømer used eclipses of Jupiter’s moon, Io, to calculate how long it took light to travel from the Sun to the Earth. With this much greater distance, he estimated it took somewhere between 10 and 11 seconds. We now know it takes just over 8 seconds, making Rømer’s 350-year-old estimate impressively accurate. At such a speed, light can travel all the way around the Earth’s equator 7.5 times in a single second. Phew! Since light takes time to travel, looking at things in the distance is a bit like time travel. When you look at the Moon, you see an image which was true just over one second ago because it has taken that time for the light to travel from the Moon to the Earth. If you use a special filter to look at the Sun, you see a snapshot of how it was 8 seconds ago (never look directly at the Sun, it can damage your eyes). Use a telescope to look further away, and you are looking even further back in time. Let’s imagine that we are standing on a planet that is 67 million light years from Earth. Let us also imagine that we have an enormous and very powerful telescope that is perfectly focused on Earth. The telescope would show us light which left the Earth 67 million years ago … that’s when Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops roamed the land. We would see dinosaurs! It is theoretically possible, but first we’d have to get 67 million light years from Earth, then build a gigantic telescope… (better get started, ed) . NEW DISCOVERIES We are learning more about light all the time! In the summer of 2018, the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) discovered some interesting bursts of photons coming from distant galaxies. The team of scientists were very excited by their discovery, and by the time you read this they might have announced why! Strangely it is not an amount of time, but a measure of distance. It is the distance that light can travel in a year, in certain conditions. It is equal to about 9.5 trillion kilometres (9 500 000 000 000 km) or 5.9 trillion miles (5 900 000 000 000 mi). Non-specialists use it to describe astronomical distances because it makes some sort of sense. Astronomers generally describe distances in parsecs (one parsec is equal to about 3.26 light years).