BBC World Service – CrowdScience, How long does light last?

Trying to catch a glimpse of the oldest stuff in the universe

How long does light last?
CrowdScience

When listener Rob from Devon, UK, heard of a newly detected planet light years away, he was struck by the sheer scale the light must travel to reach us here on Earth. It got him wondering: How long does light last? What’s the oldest light we’ve ever observed? And does light ever die?

To find out, presenter Anand Jagatia calls on some of the brightest minds in astronomy and physics.

Astronomer Matthew Middleton from the University of Southampton describes himself as “a kid in a sweet shop” when it comes to physics, and that enthusiasm comes in handy, because scientists still struggle to define exactly what light is. What we do know is that light comes in many forms, and choosing the right kind can peel back the cosmic curtain, revealing the universe’s deepest and darkest secrets. That knowledge will prove vital in Anand’s search for the oldest light ever observed.

At the European Southern Observatory in Chile, staff astronomer Pascale Hibon gives Anand a behind-the-scenes look at the Very Large Telescope, one of the most advanced optical instruments on Earth, perfectly placed under some of the clearest skies on the planet. Light from the objects Pascale studies has often travelled for billions of years, making her images snapshots of the distant past. In a sense, she’s pretty much a time traveller.

If light has crossed the vastness of the universe to reach us, it must be unimaginably ancient. But what will become of it in the far future? Could we trap it and preserve it forever?

“If we knew what light is, that might be an easier question to answer,” says Miles Padgett at the University of Glasgow, who has spent his career trying to pin it down. As Anand discovers, physics can be more philosophical than you might expect.

From redshifted galaxies at the edge of the observable universe to exotic materials that can slow light to walking pace, CrowdScience explores whether we can catch light, how it changes over time, and why truly understanding it remains one of physics’ most stubborn challenges.

Presenter: Anand Jagatia
Producer: Harrison Lewis
Editor: Ilan Goodman

(Image: An area of deep space with thousands of galaxies in various shapes and sizes on a black background. Most are circles or ovals, with a few spirals. More distant galaxies are smaller, down to being mere dots, while closer galaxies are larger and some appear to be glowing. Red and orange galaxies contain more dust or more stellar activity Credit:ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, G. Östlin, P. G. Perez-Gonzalez, J. Melinder, the JADES Collaboration, M. Zamani (ESA/Webb))

Source: BBC World Service – CrowdScience, How long does light last?

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Patrick Favrel (@patleon.bsky.social) | #StreetArt by #INTI, Wuppertal 2025 @inti.artist

#StreetArt by #INTI, Wuppertal 2025@inti.artist

Patrick Favrel (@patleon.bsky.social) 2025-08-20T11:58:06.906Z

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Freya Snowball (@freyasnowball.bsky.social) | The view from under a 7ft high self-seeded fennel with Mancunian blue sky on the balcony…

The view from under a 7ft high self-seeded fennel with Mancunian blue sky on the balcony for #BlueTue 💙🌱🩵🌱💙 #ColourADay #ColorADay🌿💙🩵🌱🩵💙🌿#EastCoastKin #flowers #Gardening #Ancoats #FlowerReport #Manchester #DailyFlowers #TuesdayBlue #sunshine #summer #MyBalcony

Freya Snowball (@freyasnowball.bsky.social) 2025-08-19T14:17:15.571Z

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The Collapse of the Roman Empire, or, Why were medieval people more primitive than the Romans?

Apologies for the sound in this one. Still figuring out what I should do with my boom mic when I’m wearing a hat.

The final quote is from the 18th-century historian Edward Gibbon in his “History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire”.

You can support the channel on Patreon here: http://www.patreon.com/jdraperlondon

You can book me for real-life tours! Find out about that here: http://www.jdraper.co.uk/private-tours

You can find me on the clock app here: http://www.tiktok.com/@jdraperlondon

Music credits:
Marty Gots A Plan by Kevin McLeod, CC-BY 4.0

Sources and further reading:
Cooper, M. L. 2018. Publicmedievalist.com. Just the Good Wife? Death and Legacy of Noblewomen in the Middle Ages. https://publicmedievalist.com/death-g…
Dutchak, P. M. (2008). The Church and Slavery in Anglo-Saxon England. Past Imperfect, 9. https://doi.org/10.21971/P7859X
Lacey, R. & Danziger, D. 1999. The Year 1000: What Life Was Like At The Turn Of The First Millennium.
Leyser, H. 2005. Medieval Women: Social History Of Women In England 450-1500
Morris, J. 1982. Londinium.
Rautanen, S., et al. “Sanitation, Water and Health.” Environment and History, vol. 16, no. 2, 2010, pp. 173–194. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/20723775, quoting Hlavinek, P. “New/ old ways for storm water: learning from the history”
Seale, Y. 2018. My Fair Lady? How We Think About Medieval Women. https://www.publicmedievalist.com/my-…
Wells, S. 2008. Barbarians To Angels: The Dark Ages Reconsidered.
Werner, A. 1998. London Bodies.

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Still the best Lesson for musicians

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