BunnyGo, on 2011-November-18, 11:26, said:
My non-expert physics answer is: It depends on your frame of reference. From the frame of reference of where they arrive you'd see them arrive and then you'd see the light from where they were created later. From an external frame of reference roughly equally distant from the start and end of the path, you'd see them where they started. So faster than light doesn't necessarily mean backwards in time in the linear way some folks expect.