Space itself, not distance, now looks like the main barrier between observers and most of the cosmos. In modern cosmology, the surprising claim is this: light can try forever and still never arrive, because the stage on which it travels keeps stretching underneath it.
Cosmologists argue this based on general relativity and the Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker metric, which treat space-time as dynamic rather than static. In a universe dominated by dark energy, the scale factor accelerates, so galaxies beyond a certain proper distance recede faster than any signal can close the gap. That does not violate special relativity, since no galaxy moves through local space faster than light; instead, the metric itself changes, enlarging the separation between comoving points. The so‑called cosmic event horizon then marks a limit: beyond it, even photons emitted toward an observer now will never cross the intervening expanding fabric.
The unsettling implication is that most galaxies are not just hard to reach with rockets but are in principle cut off from any exchange of information. Observers today already see objects whose current recession speed exceeds light because of the Hubble flow. As expansion accelerates, more structures slip past the event horizon, their last photons arriving while their later history is sealed away. What looks like a vast, continuous sky may therefore be only the visible shell of a much larger, permanently disconnected universe.