About Us


In reality there is no us.

My name is Dave. I am a retired software developer, who has had an interest in astronomy for most of my life.

My love of astronomy, and my desire to share decades worth of experience with you is the impetus for this website. I’m not selling anything, or collecting any data, and anything here is yours to use.

Starting as a kid of about 8 or 9 years of age, and armed with a cheap department store telescope, a library card, and a desire to know what is out there, I set out to explore the universe.

Through the years, my knowledge increased, and my telescopes have gotten bigger, and better. But somewhere in my explorations I found that I enjoyed sharing my years of hard-won and self-taught knowledge of the wonders of the universe with others.

In addition, I am an instrument-rated private pilot. A prosumer-level photographer specializing in landscape, seascape, and sunset/sunrise photos. I also enjoy building scale models depicting the United States space program.


Why the Name?

So, why did I name this website “Ancient Photons Observatory”? Well, it’s simple really. You see, in reality, astronomy is a study of light – Photons.

Those photons, quanta of light, were emitted by the object under study, traveled vast distances through space, and eventually collided with our detectors. Whether that detector is a CCD chip, a strip of film, a spectrograph, or an old-fashioned eyeball makes no difference. By the time we detect the photon, it is ancient.

Thanks to the speed of light, we can never know the current state of any astronomical object we observe. Think about that for a second. We can never know the current state of any object we see. Be it the light of the most distant object in the observable universe, or your fingertips. Why?

In this case, we are only concerned about photons that exist in the spectrum of visible light, although photons run the gamut from ultra-high gamma rays to very low-energy radio waves.

So, getting back to the premise that we can never know the current state of any object we see; we have to ask ourselves, why is that?

It is because the speed of light is finite – it takes a given amount of time to travel from where it started its journey until it reaches its destination.

In the case of photons emitted by the sun; once they escape from the sun’s surface and start their journey through space, some will arrive at our detectors (eyes, camera, whatever) in about 8 minutes and 20 seconds. So, by the time the newly emitted solar photon enters our detector, we see it how it existed 8 minutes and 20 seconds ago, not as it is now.

Likewise, if a photon strikes your fingertip and is reflected into your eyes, are you seeing your fingertip as it is now? The answer is no. You are seeing it, as it was about 3 nanoseconds ago – or about 3 billionths of a second ago. An exceedingly small amount of time – granted – but still, you are not seeing your fingertip as it currently is.

Let’s move out into space a bit.

And that is only the light in our neighborhood of the galaxy. For example, light from the Andromeda Galaxy takes two and a half million years to reach our detectors here on Earth. At the time the photon was emitted from the Andromeda Galaxy Homo habilis — a species of early humans was emerging. They are commonly known as the first species to use carved stone tools.

Astronomy is a study, where we depend on photons reaching our detectors here on earth, and for the most part, those photons are ancient.

Hence the name of my website is Ancient Photons Observatory. Please, join us as we marvel at our universe together.