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  1. How can light (or electromagnetic radiation) travel through a vacuum when there is nothing there to act as a medium, and do so forever in all directions? For example the light coming from a star millions of light years away. Light is observed as traveling at velocity v=c, according to the second postulate of special relativity. But according to ...

  2. May 2, 2014 · Light may seem to be an exception, leading many to say that light is a wave that can travel through a vacuum with no medium. Light doesn't use EM fields as its medium; light IS an EM (electromagnetic) wave. Maxwell's equations tell us that a magnetic field changing in time causes an electric field to change in space, and an electric field ...

  3. May 13, 2003 · Yes, a vacuum is necessary for light to travel at its maximum speed. In any other medium, such as air or water, light will encounter particles that can slow it down. However, in a vacuum, there are no particles to interact with, allowing light to travel at its maximum speed without any obstructions.

  4. Unlike sound, light can travel through a vacuum — it doesn't need a medium.It can travel through transparent materials such as glass, water, and air. (A material light can't travel through is said to be opaque.) In a vacuum, light travels with speed 3.00 x 10 8 m/sec.This speed is given the symbol c. In a transparent medium, light slows down ...

  5. Dec 25, 2011 · Electric and magnetic fields can exist in a vacuum. When an electric field changes, it creates a changing magnetic field, and vice versa. Oscillations between those fields travel at the speed of light through the vacuum. That's the classical view, which does not involve photons.

  6. Of course yes. Light from sun reaches earth through the vacuum present in the space. Light does not require any medium to travel. However, Light can also travel in medium like air, water and solids. Example,we can see things inside water and glass which is a liquid and solid, which is due to travel of light. Suggest Corrections.

  7. May 19, 2016 · And how can it behave like a wave and pass through a vacuum, when all other waves require a medium to propagate? ... So the question re: how can light travel through a vacuum if it’s waves is a ...

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