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There are plenty of objects that are good at blocking light and casting shadows; clouds, trees, birds, tables, people, the moon. But what about light itself? Can photons cast shadows? At first glance, the answer appears to be no. Light - photons - are electromagnetic waves, and electromagnetic waves dont directly interact with themselves. Other waves in nature - waves in shallow water, for example - can directly bounce off of or at least influence each other . But not photons - they just pass right through. Thats why sunlight doesnt block cell phone signals, or human vision. However, there are three indirect ways that photons CAN interact with other photons. First, if a photon bumps into, say, an electron, and that electron bumps into another photon, the photons will technically have redirected each other. But this requires an electron to be in just the right place at the right time, so I dont think this really counts as a way for a photon by itself to make a shadow. Second, just l