Time passes as photons go from A to B.

Time passes in our frame of reference, but what is "true" in one F of R is not necessarily the case in another.

When we travel faster through space we also travel faster through time?

If we could travel at superluminal speed we would be travelling backwards in time, or so the popular science books tell us. If the speed of light is the changeover point, then logically we must be stationary relative to time when travelling at "c", in the same way that a vehicle that is travelling forward must stop before it can reverse. If we are stationary in time, but moving in space, we must be in more than one place at a time. It follows that a photon would be at A and B at the same time, in its own F of R.


There never was nothing.