<font color="yellow">1. If light travels through space, does it displace space or whatever space is made up of, in order for light to get where it needs to be?</font><br /><br />No.<br /><br /><font color="yellow">What im trying to understand is, does light just zooms through, passes, or shifts particles in the atomic level? </font><br /><br />Usually the light is absorbed by the electron of an atom, exciting it to a higher energy level.<br /><br /><font color="yellow">2. Why does light max out at its current speed? If we can assume that light can go a billion times as fast than it normally would, what would happen to it and its behavior? Would like go in a straight line still or move in some weird direction? </font><br /><br />The speed of light is constant, but the "second" is not. If the gravitational field is strong (even weak), light will actually take a curved path. This is stated in Einstein's General Relativity. This means that the second in intense gravitational fields is longer than it is in weaker gravitational fields. The greater the curvature, the longer the second. Note that the speed of light is always 299,792,458 meters per second. Therefore, a longer second implied by a gravitational field means it takes longer for light to travel 299,792,458 meters, even when the change in so-called "proper" time is just one second.<br /><br /><font color="yellow">3. Since the speed of light is slowed in the air or water, then it would do the same for space correct?</font><br /><br />Sorta. The speed of light in materials is slower because of electromagnetism. The travel time in space near masses is longer because of gravitational time dilation and space-time geometry (speed of light is constant here, but not the second). In both cases, the path of light is not straight.<br /><br /><font color="yellow">Assuming this, light from the our sun traveling in a really long distance would eventually slow down enough for it to possibly sto</font>