Also, imagine having the technology to send signals through the lens and get the attention of intelligent life on the other side.
Also, imagine having the technology to send signals through the lens and get the attention of intelligent life on the other side.
At 10 billion light years away from the most distant lens it is 100% certain that they are no longer in a gravitational lensing configuration.
For a frame of reference, the Milky Way will be in the middle of its epic merger with Andromeda in about 5 billion years.
Might just not be us.
These distances and time periods are unfathomably long. I can see predicting the alignment of galaxies but predicting a civilization with an adequate evolution stage will exist at the right spot, at the right time is very different. Any civilization with this power of prediction probably has a level of advancement that makes the difference between humans and amoeba look positively non-existent, and probably wouldn't bother with broadcasting lowly radio waves into the universe.
I can't imagine the universe and evolution of life being so deterministic and predictable especially over this time scale, no matter what tech you have.
> probably wouldn't bother with broadcasting lowly radio waves into the universe.
I bet we would be very glad to receive such a transmission, even when knowing full well "replying" isn't a realistic option (both due to technology limitations and the RTT meaning that even if the reply receives were descendants, they'd be so far removed as to be entirely another ship-of-theseus civilisation)
A gift in a cosmic dying sigh could be motivation enough.
"Should anyone receive this, know that, as far as life forms go, you were not quite alone and life existed beyond yours. We're sending this knowing full well we'll be long gone, but during all of our civilisation history we could only hypothesise that we were not. We hoped but never knew, may this transmission relieve you of the doubts we had; you now unambiguously know."