The only thing that can truly trap a photon is a black hole. Since $E=mc^2$, we know that energy is the same thing as mass times a constant squared. Photons aren't independent particles that travel as loners into space for no reason; they require a source of power. Once that source of power is cut, that photon stream will disappear into nothingness within picoseconds.
The life of a photon is entirely dependent on the life of the source (emitter), such as a star. Imagine a photon as a really long string of radiation, the string gets longer and longer from the source as long as the source is still alive, that string will keep stretching/reaching out into the cosmos until it is blocked by an object or absorbed by a black hole or the source of power, in this case, a star, dies.
When you shine a light into a geodesic dome, assuming it is lined with perfect mirrors, in an attempt to trap light, once you cut off the source of light by attempting to enclose the photon-string, it all goes dark. You can't trap the long string of radiation without trapping the source of light too. That's why it is impossible to trap photons with ordinary matter, no matter how reflective the mirrors are.
You can slow down the speed of light tremendously, like with a diamond, but you can't trap it. Now, with a gravity well like a black hole, that's a whole different story, since a black hole eats up both matter and photons.