Firstly, a couple of corrections – the Pillars of Creation are 7,000 light years away, not 400-500 million. And a light year is the distance that light travels in a year, so it is a measurement of distance, not time. So light from the Pillars takes 7,000 years (not light years) to reach us, so when we look at them we see them as they were 7,000 years ago.
So the simple answer to your question is that we don’t know for sure, and we won’t know until the light reaches us. It is only a theory, based on an image taken of a nearby dust cloud that looks like it could be the result of a shockwave from a supernova. If there has been a supernova it could have blown the pillars away as they are just dust and gas floating in space. If this happened, it happened 6,000 years ago, so we will actually see it happen in 1,000 years time.
Excuse me for a stupid question. Astronomy is not my specialty, and I lack understanding of physics of light traveling a long distance. How long the actual destruction of The Pillars of Creation took time? I mean, if we were standing right beside and watching it. I understand that whatever event occurred in a great distance from us, it takes some time for us to witness it visually, as the light (photons) travels from the source of event to reach our receptors. But if the explosion happened in a far distance, wouldn’t the duration of that explosion be the same, just late time-wise.
Imagine there are humans 70 light years away. They are sending us audio and video recordings, but it takes 70 years for the signals to arrive. Almost everyone in those recordings would be dead by the time we see it, and the rest would be very old. We know this, without seeing them die, because we know how far away they are and we know what a human lifespan looks like.
Let’s say you see image of a falling glass. You can calculate it will hit the ground in exactly 1 second and you know it will shatter in pieces. If I tell you that this image is from 5 seconds ago, you know that the glass is shattered even if you didn’t see the landing itself.
That’s how Pillars work. We predicted that they will be destroyed in X years and we know that they are less than X light years from us. Thus, their destruction has already occured.
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