Pioneer0333 - Yes, but....<br /><br />For light telescopes [as in electromagnetic radiation, not lack of weight], the limit is the speed of light.<br /><br />This is equally true for visible light as ii is for microwave, infrared, x-ray, gamma-ray, etc.<br /><br />The limit then becomes time, i.e. how old is light, or electromagnetic radiation.<br /><br />Thus one could say, at least for our universe, this limit might be 100,000 years after the big bang.<br /><br />Then, of course, we need to date the big bang.<br /><br />Which is mostly done by telescope, i.e. spectral analysis, red shift effects, etc.<br /><br />There is, of course, a degree of circular reasoning in these estimates - but they generally are about 10 - 20 billion years ago [more precisely 12-15 billion years ago, current popular estimates].<br /><br />Hence 10-20 billion light years away for distance limit.<br /><br />Note that the universe was opaque before becoming transparent.<br /><br />And, of course, the possibility that there are forms of energy penetrating our universe from another universe.<br /><br />Which is why I started my thread on dark energy telescopes. [dark energy could be from outside the system, making our universe an open system - which is opposite the assumptions of most astronomers, btw.]<br /><br />If dark energy travels faster than c (c=the speed of light), then dark energy telescopes could vastly extend our visibility horizon far beyond current limits.<br /><br />First, though, we must find a detector surface for observing dark energy!