Vaporing Light
This work portrays the state of higher-dimensional light as seen through a dimensional membrane. In this space, light appears to evaporate like vapor, then gradually transforms and returns in a different form. Light moves through space at the speed of light, which represents the upper limit of its possible velocity. On an Earth scale, this speed equals roughly seven and a half revolutions around the planet in a single second—an almost unimaginable rapidity. Yet when viewed on a cosmic scale, the same speed becomes relatively slow, requiring approximately 2.5 million years to travel one way between the Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy. This work explores an alternative mode of movement: light altering its state and traversing vast distances instantaneously, like teleportation. Such motion evokes a quantum-entanglement-like operation, suggesting that light may transcend linear travel by shifting form and reappearing beyond conventional spatial limits.