If light is matter why doesn't it collide with other light?

If light is matter why doesn't it collide with other light?

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sciencenews.org/article/lhc-atlas-photons-interact-physics
cerncourier.com/cws/article/cern/66878
space.com/34852-neutron-star-shows-quantum-property-evidence.html
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cuz no mass

Why not?

Interference effects between two beams can occur if the beams are related to each other somehow: perhaps the originate from the same source, as occurs in an interferometer.

hiow do you know if they're related?
are they rednecks?

because if they where to collide then they would have definite position, and if you measure the collision it would also give their definite speeds.

this cant happen.

also, no mass, and the exclusion principle. and yknow, they are waves

all of these reasons combined are why they cant collide

Their internet connection is just way to slow.

correlation, and entanglement

also my sister's sweet, tight, high school freshman pussy.

Because they are Bosons.
And the Pauli exclusion principle says they are allowed to occupy the same space, unlike Fermions.

I don't know a much about the exclution princeple or why it must be true, but it seems to have to do with different states of waveforms and stuff. Shit gets pretty mathematical in quantum mechanics, and I don't have the education for that.

>high school freshman pussy
Shit man, this is a blue board. I should not be getting boners around here. You tapping that?