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First images from Euclid are in

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544 points mooreds | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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lefrenchy ◴[] No.41910562[source]
It's just so crazy to me to see a galaxy 420 million light years away. That is so much time for what we're seeing to have changed. I presume life can form within that window given the right conditions, so to some degree it just feels a bit sad that the distance is so great that we can't actually see what may exist in this moment that far away
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vasco ◴[] No.41910744[source]
In another way it's really cool to be able to "see the past" even if all we see is always the past. At this level it is like a super power. If only some aliens had put a mirror somewhere far so we could see ourselves too. Or multiple mirrors at different distances.

With enough mirrors and light bouncing around the size of the universe itself can be a "storage media" of the past with different photons all around carrying "how this location looked X years ago". "All" you have to do to know what happened is find the right photon to see whatever it is you want to see.

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1. steveoscaro ◴[] No.41910803[source]
Well that sounds like a good premise for a scifi book or movie.
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2. IngoBlechschmid ◴[] No.41911636[source]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hundred_Light-Year_Diary

By Greg Egan, so highly recommended.