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Science, Tech & Future

How Light Travels Through Space

A1 A2 B1 B2

When you see a star, you are receiving a traveling wave of energy. Light moves through empty space at a steady speed, so distant light carries old information to Earth.

A1 Level

Stars send light across space to your eyes.

How Light Reaches Us

Stars send light across space to your eyes.

Mina walks outside at night. The air feels cold. The sky is clear. She sees a thin Moon and one bright star next to it. Mina smiles, but she also wonders.

“Space is very big,” she thinks. “And space is like empty. So how can I see a star?”

Her friend stands beside her and points up. “The star makes light,” her friend says. “Light can travel.”

Mina looks again. She imagines the light leaving the star. It moves in a straight line. It moves very fast. It does not stop. It can cross empty space.

Light is not the same as air. It is energy. It can go where there is no air at all. That is why we can see the Moon, the Sun, and far stars.

Mina takes a slow breath. The star feels far, but the light feels close. It is like the sky is sending a small message to her eyes.

She stays quiet for a moment. Then she thinks, “When I look up, I am not alone. Light is always traveling.”


Key Points

  • Light can travel through empty space.
  • Light moves fast in straight lines.

Words to Know

light /laɪt/ (n) — bright energy we can see
space /speɪs/ (n) — the area beyond Earth
star /stɑːr/ (n) — a bright ball in the night sky
travel /ˈtrævəl/ (v) — to move from one place to another
fast /fæst/ (adj) — moving very quickly
straight /streɪt/ (adj) — not bending left or right
sky /skaɪ/ (n) — the space above the Earth
see /siː/ (v) — to look with your eyes


📝 Practice Questions

A1 – True/False

  1. Light can travel through empty space.
  2. Light moves only when air moves.
  3. Mina looks at a bright star near the Moon.

A1 – Multiple Choice

  1. What does the star send out?
    A. Light
    B. Water
    C. Smoke

  2. How does light move in space (in the story)?
    A. In straight lines
    B. In circles
    C. Only up and down

  3. What does Mina feel at the end?
    A. Calm wonder
    B. Angry and scared
    C. Sleepy and bored

A1 – Short Answer

  1. Who is the main character?
  2. What is next to the Moon?
  3. Light is very ____.

A1 – True/False

  1. True
  2. False
  3. True

A1 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. A
  3. A

A1 – Short Answer

  1. Mina
  2. A bright star
  3. fast
A2 Level

Space has no air, but light still moves.

Light in Empty Space

Space has no air, but light still moves.

After dinner, Mina goes up to the rooftop with her uncle. The city below is full of small lights. Above them, the sky is darker. A few stars are visible.

Mina asks, “Uncle, space is empty, right? Does light need air to move?”

Her uncle smiles and takes out a small flashlight. “Watch,” he says. He turns it on. A bright line appears on the wall.

“Light is energy,” he says. “It is not air moving. So it can travel even when there is no air.”

A steady speed

He adds one more idea. “In empty space, light moves at a constant speed. It does not get tired. It does not slow down by itself.”

Mina nods. “So the light from the Sun travels to us?”

“Yes,” her uncle says. “And it takes time.”

Far light means old light

He points at the stars. “Space is huge. So light from a far star can take years to arrive. When you see that star, you are seeing old light—like a letter that needed a long trip.”

Mina remembers a photo from NASA where sunlight fills space. She understands: space can look empty, but light can still cross it.

Before they go inside, Mina looks up again and thinks, “Next time I see the Sun, I will remember its light traveled to me.”


Key Points

  • Light can move through a vacuum because it is energy.
  • Light’s speed in space stays constant.
  • Long distance makes light travel time important.

Words to Know

vacuum /ˈvækjuːm/ (n) — space with no air
energy /ˈenərdʒi/ (n) — power that can move or change things
speed /spiːd/ (n) — how fast something moves
constant /ˈkɒnstənt/ (adj) — staying the same
distance /ˈdɪstəns/ (n) — how far something is
arrive /əˈraɪv/ (v) — to reach a place
message /ˈmesɪdʒ/ (n) — information sent to someone
flashlight /ˈflæʃlaɪt/ (n) — a small hand light
straight /streɪt/ (adj) — not bending


📝 Practice Questions

A2 – True/False

  1. Mina thinks light needs air at first.
  2. Her uncle uses a flashlight to explain light.
  3. Light from far stars can arrive instantly.

A2 – Multiple Choice

  1. What is light, according to the article?
    A. Energy
    B. Air
    C. Rain

  2. What stays the same for light in a vacuum?
    A. Its speed
    B. Its color every time
    C. Its direction always changes

  3. Why can starlight be “old”?
    A. Space is huge, so travel takes time
    B. Stars stop shining at night
    C. Air blocks all light in space

A2 – Short Answer

  1. Where do Mina and her uncle talk?
  2. What tool does her uncle use?
  3. Far light means ____ light.

A2 – True/False

  1. True
  2. True
  3. False

A2 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. A
  3. A

A2 – Short Answer

  1. On a rooftop
  2. A flashlight
  3. old
B1 Level

Light is a traveling wave, and the sky sends delayed information.

Seeing Is Receiving Light

Light is a traveling wave, and the sky sends delayed information.

Mina scrolls through her phone and sees a news photo of a far galaxy. The colors look unreal. She whispers, “Is that happening now?”

Her teacher from a small science club hears her question and says, “That photo is a message made of light.”

Light as a traveling wave

Light is energy that moves outward from a bright source, like the Sun or a star. Scientists call it an electromagnetic wave—a wave of energy that can travel without air.

First, a star produces light.
Next, the light spreads out and travels through the vacuum of space.
Finally, a tiny part of that light reaches a telescope or your eyes.

Straight paths and a cosmic rule

In open space, light travels in straight lines. It keeps a constant speed in a vacuum (about 300,000 kilometers per second). Because that speed is the same everywhere, distance always creates delay.

NASA and ESA often remind people that space images are not “live” in the normal sense. The light needed time to cross space.

Old light in a bright city

Mina’s friend lives in a big city and cannot see many stars because of streetlights and buildings. But even when stars are hidden, the idea stays true: seeing is receiving light that just arrived.

Mina smiles at the galaxy photo again. “So I’m looking into the past,” she says.

Her teacher nods. “Yes. And that is what makes the universe feel both far and close.”


Key Points

  • Light is an electromagnetic wave: energy that can travel without air.
  • In a vacuum, light moves in straight lines at a constant speed.
  • Distant starlight is delayed information from the past.

Words to Know

wave /weɪv/ (n) — a moving pattern of energy
electromagnetic /ɪˌlektrəʊmæɡˈnetɪk/ (adj) — related to light and energy waves
vacuum /ˈvækjuːm/ (n) — space with no air
constant /ˈkɒnstənt/ (adj) — staying the same
signal /ˈsɪɡnəl/ (n) — a message carried by waves
telescope /ˈtelɪskəʊp/ (n) — a tool to see far objects in space
galaxy /ˈɡæləksi/ (n) — a huge group of stars
delay /dɪˈleɪ/ (n) — waiting time before something arrives
bend /bend/ (v) — to curve, not stay straight
observe /əbˈzɜːv/ (v) — to watch carefully
dust /dʌst/ (n) — very small particles


📝 Practice Questions

B1 – True/False

  1. The article calls light an electromagnetic wave.
  2. City lights can make stars harder to see.
  3. Light in space always slows down by itself.

B1 – Multiple Choice

  1. What is “seeing,” in the article’s idea?
    A. Receiving light that arrived
    B. Making light with your eyes
    C. Hearing sound from stars

  2. What does “constant speed” mean here?
    A. Light’s speed stays the same in a vacuum
    B. Light speeds up near Earth only
    C. Light moves faster at night

  3. What is the galaxy photo compared to?
    A. A message made of light
    B. A mirror in a room
    C. A cloud of smoke

B1 – Short Answer

  1. What kind of wave is light called?
  2. Why is distant starlight “delayed”?
  3. Name one reason stars are hard to see in cities.

B1 – True/False

  1. True
  2. True
  3. False

B1 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. A
  3. A

B1 – Short Answer

  1. An electromagnetic wave
  2. The distance is huge
  3. Streetlights (city lights)
B2 Level

Even “live” space images arrive late—because light must travel.

The Universe’s Time Machine Is Made of Light

Even “live” space images arrive late—because light must travel.

Mina watches a livestream from a powerful telescope. People in many countries are watching too. The chat is full of short messages: “Wow!” “Look at that!” “So clear!” It feels like the universe is happening right now on her screen.

Then Mina pauses. “Wait,” she thinks. “Even this is delayed.”

A speed limit written into space

Light moves through a vacuum at a constant speed. That simple fact becomes a deep rule: the universe has a built-in speed limit for information. Nothing can send a visual “now” faster than light can travel.

First, a star or galaxy releases energy as light.
Next, that light travels outward as electromagnetic waves through space.
Finally, telescopes collect the light, and computers turn it into images.

Because distance is so large, time becomes part of every picture. When you see the Sun, you see it a little in the past. When you see a far galaxy, you may be seeing light that started traveling before modern human history.

Light as information (and why it looks straight)

Light usually moves in straight lines through open space. That is why shadows have sharp edges, and why a flashlight makes a clear beam. But the story is not perfectly simple. Materials like glass can change light’s path, and gravity can bend it too. Astronomers even use this bending—often called “gravitational lensing”—to study very distant objects.

Researchers connected to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and teams at ESA work with this idea every day: telescopes are not just “eyes.” They are collectors of ancient signals.

History by starlight

Magazine-style science writing in journals like Nature and Science often describes astronomy as a kind of archaeology: instead of digging in the ground, we collect light. Light carries clues about temperature, motion, and what stars are made of. In that way, space becomes a library, and light is the ink.

Mina looks back at the livestream. She still feels close to the universe—maybe even closer. The delay does not ruin the moment. It gives it meaning.

When you look at the night sky, you are not just looking far away—you are looking back in time. Light does not jump to you. It travels, patiently, across empty space. What part of the universe’s story are you seeing tonight?


Key Points

  • Light’s constant speed makes distance equal time delay.
  • Light carries information; telescopes collect “messages” from the past.
  • Light travels mostly straight, but gravity and materials can bend it.

Words to Know

universe /ˈjuːnɪvɜːs/ (n) — everything that exists in space
information /ˌɪnfəˈmeɪʃən/ (n) — facts carried in a message
electromagnetic /ɪˌlektrəʊmæɡˈnetɪk/ (adj) — related to light and energy waves
constant /ˈkɒnstənt/ (adj) — staying the same
limit /ˈlɪmɪt/ (n) — the highest point something can reach
signal /ˈsɪɡnəl/ (n) — a message carried by waves
telescope /ˈtelɪskəʊp/ (n) — a tool that collects light from far space
galaxy /ˈɡæləksi/ (n) — a huge group of stars
lens /lenz/ (n) — curved glass that bends light
gravity /ˈɡrævɪti/ (n) — a force that pulls things together
bend /bend/ (v) — to curve, not stay straight
delay /dɪˈleɪ/ (n) — time between sending and arriving
ancient /ˈeɪnʃənt/ (adj) — very old
clue /kluː/ (n) — a small sign that helps you know something


📝 Practice Questions

B2 – True/False

  1. The article says the universe has a speed limit for information.
  2. Gravity and materials can bend light’s path.
  3. The livestream shows space with no delay at all.

B2 – Multiple Choice

  1. Why are telescope images not truly “now”?
    A. Light needs time to travel
    B. Telescopes cannot collect light
    C. Space has too much air

  2. What is gravitational lensing used for?
    A. Studying very distant objects
    B. Making stars cooler
    C. Stopping light completely

  3. In the article, astronomy is compared to what?
    A. Archaeology with light
    B. Cooking with fire
    C. Painting with water

B2 – Short Answer

  1. What does light carry besides brightness, in this article?
  2. Give one thing that can bend light.
  3. How does Mina feel about the delay in the end?

B2 – True/False

  1. True
  2. True
  3. False

B2 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. A
  3. A

B2 – Short Answer

  1. Information (signals)
  2. Gravity (or glass/lenses)
  3. She feels meaning and awe, not disappointed