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Photons don't "age". Aging means you can recall a past, so photons don't because they don't have a past, or a future. All moments of time for the life of a photon's ontological existence, are the same moment, or no moment.
In a universe with four dimensions, you have to move at the speed of light in at least one of them.
How do you reconcile this with Doppler's effect, Sagnac's effect, Fizeau's effect, Interference patterns?
There's nothing special about what we identify as the x,y, z axis of space and the t or time axis. We can always construct a "direction" of travel for an object that is a combination of the spatial and time directions. An object will then always move at precisely c in that "direction" and have no velocity at all in the other three directions orthogonal to this.
Photons have a history, but it's easier to understand and predict with a wave model.
"c" has units of m/s and time has units of s, how can one have a speed(m/s) in a dimension of s?
If you use a conversion factor c to convert the proper time elapsed to a space equivalent, then.....
Have you seen Penrose's description of two observers walking past each other?
I'm not sure that I have, sorry. Is there any online reference?
If a photon, a single photon, can be a clock of some kind, it can have one and only one "tick". Not much room for a history there.
The reason you can, and do, move at the speed of light in one dimension--the time dimension--is because time has to vanish from your local frame of reference, if you want to age at all.That's a weird but true explanation of a theory.
Photons don't "age".
Since photons, or electromagnetic radiation in general has this "time equivalence", it should be possible to quotient the total space with it. This is what a Minkowski spacetime diagram represents, a quotient space.
Have you seen Penrose's description of two observers walking past each other? That this means they are literally in different 'spaces', at least according to Minkowski.
In a way they do. There are a number of waves of a photon between two events (in a given frame, its frequency times its duration between the two events). That is an age of sorts.If you're saying that the photon does not undergo any physical change from one event to the other, that's true, but also true of something like a proton which doesn't move at c. Protons also cannot recall a past.
This is bending what people say beyond the breaking point.
It was emitted from x meters away with a different gravitational potential, x/c seconds ago, travelled through refracting and polarising media, and may have been reflected off something, before we detected it. That's quite a lot of known history, and if it had a few companions, like a spectrum, we can probably deduce its original energy before doppler and gravitational red shift altered it.
But, why will an object move at c in that direction?
but speed is defined as spatial change over time, and is not a meaningful concept in spacetime.
I don't especially like this way of looking at how objects move, there's a lot that would need some more precise mathematical formulation.
That's probably not the explanation you ( @varsigma ) were looking for but it is AN explanation.
I think that misses the point I made. Which was that we give them a history. If you didn't know all the above about the paths, what could photons tell you?
This process ages the metal.