Expansion redshift VS gravitational redshift?

In summary: The only gravity that would not cancel out is that of the observed object, as it is the starting point it can only pull light back.In summary, the universe is expanding and this is due to the gravitational pull of all the stuff in between us and the observed objects.
  • #1
anya2
4
0
While objects closer to us tend to shift both in direction red or blue, depending on their movement in relation to us, distant objects such as galaxies tend to only shift to the red.

As I understand this is the base of the idea that the universe is expanding. But how are we sure that is the case, and redshifts are not due to the gravitational pull of all those objects that lie between us and the observed objects?
 
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  • #2
anya2 said:
While objects closer to us tend to shift both in direction red or blue, depending on their movement in relation to us, distant objects such as galaxies tend to only shift to the red.

As I understand this is the base of the idea that the universe is expanding. But how are we sure that is the case, and redshifts are not due to the gravitational pull of all those objects that lie between us and the observed objects?

Because gravitation effects of stuff in between the source and the observer cancel out.

It is the difference in gravitational potential between source and observer that matters. Dropping a little bit into and then out of the gravitational well along the way may alter the direction of light, but that's all. This change in direction is measured and used in study of gravitational lensing.

Cheers -- sylas
 
  • #3
Yep, that makes sense, thanks a lot

The only gravity that would not cancel out is that of the observed object, as it is the starting point it can only pull light back

I am not sure but I think I've read that the CMBR has shifted uniformly, but if space indeed expanded in such a high rate - shouldn't different regions of the CMBR be redshifted by a different amount, depending on their position relative to our point of observation?
 
  • #4
sylas said:
Because gravitation effects of stuff in between the source and the observer cancel out.
No, it results in a blueshift.
If it'd cancel out, there would be no deceleration of expansion either.
 
  • #5
Ich said:
No, it results in a blueshift.
If it'd cancel out, there would be no deceleration of expansion either.
Huh? Sylas is correct. On average, the effects completely cancel, because compared to the average density, there are just as many voids as collapsed objects (by some appropriate measure).
 
  • #6
I think we probably all agree and are just using the words differently, but in fact gravitational effects play a crucial role in cosmological redshift. The distance vs redshfit relationship is a key cosmological probe and the very reason it tells us about the composition of the Universe is because the gravitational effects at play can be modeled and that tells us how much stuff (and how much of different kinds of stuff) are around. This is true even if we ignore structure (i.e. the simplest homogenous FRW model).

To see how gravity is important, try modelling a matter only Universe using Newtonian physics only. You will see that even for quite large distances, you get pretty close to the correct answer by modelling the redshift as a combination of a Doppler redshift plus a blueshift due to the gravitation matter enclosed in a sphere centred on the observer with a radius equal to the distance to the emmitter (Gauss's law let's us ignore everything outside in a homogenous universe). In the Newtonian case you can work out the gravitational blueshift by thinking about the potential energy difference between the emmitter and observer.

Now, in the full relativistic case, there is an inherent ambiguity in dividing up the redshift into the 'doppler' and 'graviational' parts, and it depends on the co-ordinates you choose as to which label gets what. There have been various bun fights in the literature about this, but the bottom line is that both motion and gravity are at play in determining what redshift is observed.
 
  • #7
Thanks, Wallace.

Chalnoth said:
On average, the effects completely cancel, because compared to the average density, there are just as many voids as collapsed objects (by some appropriate measure).
If we have, as a toy model, a whole universe filled with static dust, the gravitational effects between any two points do not "cancel out". Instead, they make the whole thing collapse. This concernes photons also, they get blueshifted.
sylas said:
It is the difference in gravitational potential between source and observer that matters.
Exactly.
But "potential" is not a basic feature of GR; for example, it is not defined in
homogeneous coordinates. That does not mean that there are no gravitational effects.
To define a potential, you have to use static coordinates. The potential is then [itex]\sqrt{g_{tt}} \simeq g_{tt}/2[/itex].
Static coordinates are centered around one (arbitrary, of course) point r=0. The potential is then (in Newtonian limit)
[tex]\frac{2 \pi G}{3 c^2} \rho r^2[/tex]
As long as there are no significant density changes during the light travel time, you can decompose photon redshift unambiguously into gravitational blueshift and doppler redshift.
In case of a static spacetime, like de Sitter, an unambiguous decomposition is always possible.
 
  • #8
Ich said:
If we have, as a toy model, a whole universe filled with static dust, the gravitational effects between any two points do not "cancel out". Instead, they make the whole thing collapse. This concernes photons also, they get blueshifted.

Not so. The simplest such model, the Milne model, is a flat universe filled with dust at critical density, and it keeps expanding indefinitely, though slowing down indefinitely as well. Photons in this universe are always redshifted.

The only way you get blue shift is with supercritical densities, which can reverse expansion into contraction and a Big Crunch. You can get blue shifts once contraction gets underway, which is perfectly obviously not going on in our universe.

As Wallace points out, you can, depending on how you work with co-ordinates, regard the redshift (or blueshift, in a contracting universe) as a gravitational effect, associated with the difference in density between emission and observation of a photon in different regions of the dust filled universe. Whether you do this with Newtonian approximations or the more correct relativistic methods only makes a difference on sufficiently large scales.

If the dust is inhomogenous on small scales, then you end up with something a bit more like our own universe, with local motions and clusters of galaxies and so on. If a photon passes by clumps of matter between emission and observation, this makes no difference, which is the point I was trying to make. What counts is the state at emission, and at observation. Going into and out of a localized gravitational well along the way has no effect, except perhaps on directions, which is the basis of gravitational lensing.

Cheers -- sylas
 
  • #9
Not so. The simplest such model, the Milne model, is a flat universe filled with dust at critical density, and it keeps expanding indefinitely, though slowing down indefinitely as well. Photons in this universe are always redshifted.
No, the Milne Model is massless, filled only with "expanding" test particles. Consequently, it has zero density and is negatively curved. Redshift is purely doppler, there are no gravitational effects.
I'm talking ablout homogeneous static dust, like a closed universe at maximum expansion. Just to illustrate that gravitational effects definitely do not cancel out.
The only way you get blue shift is with supercritical densities, which can reverse expansion into contraction and a Big Crunch. You can get blue shifts once contraction gets underway, which is perfectly obviously not going on in our universe.
I'm not talking about a net blueshift. I said that gravitation results in a blueshift, which is outweighed by doppler redshift in an expanding universe.
As Wallace points out, you can, depending on how you work with co-ordinates, regard the redshift (or blueshift, in a contracting universe) as a gravitational effect, associated with the difference in density between emission and observation of a photon in different regions of the dust filled universe.
That's not how I read Wallace's post, and I wouldn't agree either. As i understand it, Wallace and I are claiming that the "potential" approach is valid in an homogeeous universe. (quote:"This is true even if we ignore structure (i.e. the simplest homogenous FRW model).")
Whether you do this with Newtonian approximations or the more correct relativistic methods only makes a difference on sufficiently large scales.
Yep, but the underlying physics is more accessible in the Newtonian formulation. You can see easily that it's exactly the matter between two points which accelerates them, not some other dubious effect.
Going into and out of a localized gravitational well along the way has no effect, except perhaps on directions, which is the basis of gravitational lensing.
Again: perfectly homogeneous dust (or DE, for that matter) does not mean that there is no potential difference. It means that, by choosing an origin for static coordinates, you can define where the global minimum is. Every photon being observed at r=0 comes from a higher potential in that picture.
 
  • #10
Edit: Crossed posts with Ich. We seem to be in good agreement though...

sylas said:
Not so. The simplest such model, the Milne model, is a flat universe filled with dust at critical density, and it keeps expanding indefinitely, though slowing down indefinitely as well. Photons in this universe are always redshifted.

Right, but when you add a homogenous matter distribution what do you find? (Edit: missed seeing that you suggest Milne model is at critical density, as Ich points out it is empty, there is no dust in it. In the Milne model nothing ever slows down, all proper velocites remain fixed). You find that the more matter you add, the less redshift you see for objects a fixed distance from you (however you define that). This is because of the effects of gravity "adding a blueshift" in some loosely defined way as the photon travels.

sylas said:
The only way you get blue shift is with supercritical densities, which can reverse expansion into contraction and a Big Crunch. You can get blue shifts once contraction gets underway, which is perfectly obviously not going on in our universe.

I think we are talking at cross purposes. Ich explained how you get a component of the redshift which is gravitational (and in fact this componet reduces the redshift), not how any gravity gives you a net blueshift.
 
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  • #11
Ich said:
If we have, as a toy model, a whole universe filled with static dust, the gravitational effects between any two points do not "cancel out". Instead, they make the whole thing collapse. This concernes photons also, they get blueshifted.
After the collapse has begun, sure. But our universe is expanding.
 
  • #12
Ich said:
No, the Milne Model is massless, filled only with "expanding" test particles. Consequently, it has zero density and is negatively curved. Redshift is purely doppler, there are no gravitational effects.

Sorry! You are quite right; I mixed up the names of my models. I meant what is sometimes called the "Einstein-de Sitter" model, which is confusing because neither Einstein nor de Sitter proposed it. I meant "dust", with mass, at critical density; not the massless test particles of the Milne model. My mistake.

I'm talking ablout homogeneous static dust, like a closed universe at maximum expansion. Just to illustrate that gravitational effects definitely do not cancel out.

Ah! I had take the "static" to mean no peculiar motions, sometimes the taken as the defining quality of "dust". My apologies again. Yes, this model will contract from that static starting point, and you will have blue shifts. The gravitational effects can be considered as gravitational in the sense Wallace described, and I think we are all on the same page with that.

My original remark about "cancellation" was strictly intended to refer to the effect of a photon passing near a massive object, in a inhomogeneous universe. Fritz Zwicky considered whether something like this could work (it is a form of "tired light" model). But it doesn't work. A localized patch of higher density matter along the photon's path has no net effect. You can think of the photon being blueshifted as it moves into the denser local region, and then redshifted as it moves back out again, with net cancellation as if that intervening clump of matter had not been there at all. Apart from a change in direction, possibly, as in gravitational lensing.

Cheers -- sylas
 
  • #13
sylas said:
My original remark about "cancellation" was strictly intended to refer to the effect of a photon passing near a massive object, in a inhomogeneous universe. Fritz Zwicky considered whether something like this could work (it is a form of "tired light" model). But it doesn't work. A localized patch of higher density matter along the photon's path has no net effect. You can think of the photon being blueshifted as it moves into the denser local region, and then redshifted as it moves back out again, with net cancellation as if that intervening clump of matter had not been there at all. Apart from a change in direction, possibly, as in gravitational lensing.
Well, actually this is only the case for matter domination. In the case of some form of dark energy, there is some net effect because gravitational potentials decay with time: the photon has less of a well to climb out of on the way out than in.

This is why I added the point that on average, due to the various underdensities and overdensities of the universe, these effects tend to cancel. In a more detailed analysis, they don't cancel exactly, but instead have some extra directional variation as a result (there's still no average effect when taken over the entire sky).
 
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  • #14
Chalnoth said:
Well, actually this is only the case for matter domination. In the case of some form of dark energy, there is some net effect because gravitational potentials decay with time: the photon has less of a well to climb out of on the way out than in.

That's an interesting idea... I had not thought of that. The effect would have to be phenomenally tiny in our universe, but I see how it could work. I wouldn't like to try and calculate it, however!

Cheers -- sylas
 
  • #15
sylas said:
That's an interesting idea... I had not thought of that. The effect would have to be phenomenally tiny in our universe, but I see how it could work. I wouldn't like to try and calculate it, however!

Cheers -- sylas
Good stuff! It's known as the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe Effect, and basically it slightly increases the fluctuations in the CMB at large scales (at small scales the effect cancels more).
 
  • #16
After the collapse has begun, sure. But our universe is expanding.
That's why doppler redshift dominates. In fact, there is additional redshift due to a negative dark energy potential.

Now I understand why you meant that the effects cancel on average. What cancels are the inhomogeneities (except our own cluster, of course). I'm talking about the total matter distribution, which adds a blueshift component to incoming light.
 
  • #17
Ich said:
Now I understand why you meant that the effects cancel on average. What cancels are the inhomogeneities (except our own cluster, of course). I'm talking about the total matter distribution, which adds a blueshift component to incoming light.
That doesn't make any sense to me. If you take, for instance, a closed universe, and take two times equidistant from the turnover point, there will be no net redshift or blueshift between them, whereas by your claim, one would expect a net blueshift.
 
  • #18
If you take, for instance, a closed universe, and take two times equidistant from the turnover point, there will be no net redshift or blueshift between them, whereas by your claim, one would expect a net blueshift.
Sorry, I'm not sure I understand that phrase.
If you mean a photon emitted dt before maximum expansion and received the same dt after maximum expansion:
The distance r is then 2dt*c.
In this case, you have a gravitational blueshift of
[tex]
\frac{2 \pi G}{3 c^2} \rho r^2
[/tex]
The coordinate acceleration of the emitter is
[tex]
\frac{4 \pi G}{3} \rho r
[/tex]
Since emitter and observer were at relative rest at turnaround, and the signal was sent dt = r/2c before, the relative velocity at the time of emission was
[tex]
dv=\frac{4 \pi G}{3} \rho r*dt = \frac{2 \pi G}{3c} \rho r^2
[/tex]
giving a redshift of
[tex]
\frac{2 \pi G}{3c^2} \rho r^2
[/tex]
which exactly cancels the blueshift above.

Really, I'm not claiming new physics. This is simply a local Newtonian approximation to an FRW metric - weak field, small velocity, no pressure.
 
  • #19
Ich said:
Sorry, I'm not sure I understand that phrase.
If you mean a photon emitted dt before maximum expansion and received the same dt after maximum expansion:
The distance r is then 2dt*c.
In this case, you have a gravitational blueshift of
[tex]
\frac{2 \pi G}{3 c^2} \rho r^2
[/tex]
The coordinate acceleration of the emitter is
[tex]
\frac{4 \pi G}{3} \rho r
[/tex]
Since emitter and observer were at relative rest at turnaround, and the signal was sent dt = r/2c before, the relative velocity at the time of emission was
[tex]
dv=\frac{4 \pi G}{3} \rho r*dt = \frac{2 \pi G}{3c} \rho r^2
[/tex]
giving a redshift of
[tex]
\frac{2 \pi G}{3c^2} \rho r^2
[/tex]
which exactly cancels the blueshift above.

Really, I'm not claiming new physics. This is simply a local Newtonian approximation to an FRW metric - weak field, small velocity, no pressure.
How do they have a net relative velocity, though? At emission, the emitter would have been moving away from the observer. But at the same time, since the system is symmetric, the observer would be moving towards the emitter by the same amount when the photon was observed, canceling that redshift.
 
  • #20
Gravity works both ways, matter on the far side counters gravitational effects from the near side. A net zero effect. Expansion is the only logical explanation.
 
  • #21
Chalnoth said:
How do they have a net relative velocity, though? At emission, the emitter would have been moving away from the observer. But at the same time, since the system is symmetric, the observer would be moving towards the emitter by the same amount when the photon was observed, canceling that redshift.

You are double counting somehow.

Lets look at this in two ways. The simplest way is to place to origin of some co-ordinates at the reciever such that they remain fixed. Imagine a spherical region around them with the emmitter at the edge of that region. When they fire the photon towards the centre they are moving away from the reciever. Since the reciever is always fixed, this means there is a redshift from the original motion so it doesn't matter that later on the emmitter starts moving towards the observer when the Universe begins contracting. The gravitational blueshift, in this case, exactly cancels this original redshift. It looks like this:

Motion at emmission causing a Doppler redshift
Obs . . . . . . Em ->

Photon is falling towards the bottom of the potential well, causing a blueshift
Obs . . . . . . << Photon

We can instead define the co-ordinates to be centred on the emmitter. In this case it remains fixed. If you think about this it means that compared to the rest frame of the emmitter, the observer will be moving towards the emmitter when the photon is observed. Thus you will have a blueshift due to motion. This might be confusing, until you realize that in these co-ordinates, the photon is moving away from the origin, climbing out of the potential well we have define, and therefore in this system the effect of gravity is to cause a redshift, in this case exactly cancelling the Doppler blueshift. It looks like this:

Motion at reception, causing Doppler blueshift
Em . . . . . . <- Obs

Photon is climbing out of potential well, causing gravitational redshift
Em . . . . . >> Photon

We could also place the origin between the emmitter and observer. In this case the relative motion cancels out, so there is no Doppler contribution. But also, we now define the bottom of the potential well to be between the two, so the photon picks up a blueshift falling in, which exactly cancels the redshift of it climbing out. It looks like this

Motion at emmission

<-Obs . . . . . . O . . . . . . Em ->

Motion canceled at reception, no net Doppler effect

Obs -> . . . . . . O . . . . . . <- Em

Photon falls into potential well, gaining energy

. . . . . . O . . . . . . << Photon

But then loses the same amoung climbing out again

<< Photon . . . . . . O . . . . . .

This might sound like a bit of mathemagic, but it is all just co-ordinate tricks with classical physics. As with any problem to do with energy, you have to be very careful about where you are defining the arbitary zero point, and make sure you are referencing everything consistantly with respect to that.
 
  • #22
In any case, these things are vastly easier to understand if you just take them in co-moving coordinates, where both the emitter and observer are stationary (up to local peculiar velocities). In co-moving coordinates, the only source of redshift is the overall expansion, and so the redshift is simply:

[tex]z + 1 = \frac{a_{obs}}{a_{emit}}[/tex]
 
  • #23
But hang on, we know that we can always just use these co-ordinates. The question is what the hell do they mean? The OP asked how motion and or gravity is responsible for causing redshift, which is a very reasonable question. Simply stating the above equation tells you how to calculate it, but it doesn't tell you what that means and doesn't answer the question. Reducing everything to the effect of 'the overall expansion' leaves you at sqaure one; what precisely is that motion, and how does it cause redshift? In fact the 'motion' implied by looking at da/dt is nothing like the intuitive motion we see in day to day life, since it encodes gravitational effects as well. This is very very convenient for cosmologists, since it reduces everything to the single function a(t), but it is horrible for people new to the area trying to work out what that function means in terms that are familiar.

Ich and I explained how you can understand the interplay between motion and gravity by looking at how the more familiar Newtonian physics gives you the same answer, but more obviously demonstrates how both motion and gravity are both at work, even in a homogenous universe.

Writing down a simple relation, and really understanding what that means are two vastly different things.
 
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  • #24
Wallace said:
But hang on, we know that we can always just use these co-ordinates. The question is what the hell do they mean?
I guess I just don't see those sorts of questions as very productive. There are so vastly many ways of looking at the situation that one can't say that they mean anyone particular thing in these terms. So I'd rather just go by the simplest explanation, which is that the photons are expanded along with space.
 
  • #25
Well then I have to disagree. When you say 'photons are expanded along with space' you are talking about something that is only true for one specific set of co-ordinates and you also imply a false causality; that there is a physical effect called 'expansion of space' which causes photons to stretch.

Simply saying 'there are many ways of looking at this, so none of them mean anything' is not very useful. In fact, as has been explained, the physics is universal, and can be seen readily by looking at the Newtonian picutre, to which all co-ordinate descriptions will converge to for small distances. The co-ordinates are what are malleable, yet you want to fix on just one co-ordinate system and force the physics to conform to that (since you remove gravity and motion and invent a new placeholder fictious effect which acts for both). I'm afraid that is bass-ackwards.

As can be readily evidenced in this forum, blanket use of this phrase without context leads to much wailing and nashing of teeth, such as 'why don't galaxies get expanded by space?' 'does the expansion of space drive electrons further from the nucleus of atoms?'. These are reasonable questions to ask when you've been told to just think of everything in terms of some ill-defined 'expansion of space' but the are easily done away with when you break it down into the simple underlying physics.

Again, I go back to the OP. It was asked whether motion and/or gravity is responsible for the observed redshift of galaxies. How does writing down 1 + z = a/a_0 and saying 'the photons get stretched by expanding space' answer this question? Redshift can be understood in simple well understood terms like motion and gravity, I see no reason to force people to abandon these intuitive notions in favour of a co-ordinate dependant mathematical function which has no universal physical meaning.

It depends on what we are trying to help people with. If you want to learn how to calculate cosmological quantities, then you need to learn the maths behind co-moving co-ordinates, and learn the easiest way to make calculations. If someone wants to a good non-mathematical intuitive understanding in terms of familiar concepts, then this is clearly not the best way to go.
 
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  • #26
Your description is no less coordinate-dependent and has no greater universal physical meaning. I just don't think your description is any more intuitive, though it is certainly more convoluted.
 
  • #27
At least this time I dropped out of the discussion in time. :smile:
 
  • #28
:sigh: I should know better than to continue, but "Once more unto the breach"...

The only reason any of this got at all convoluted is because you were incorrectly applying Newtonian physics, and thus I had to explain in gory detail how your re-collapsing dust ball example was perfectly consistant with a Newtonian description. Remember that you introduced the re-collapsing idea, and when doing so failed to correctly apply Newtonian physics.

If we just return to the original question, how to understand how gravity and motion play a role in the redshifts we see in the Universe, we see that there is one single unique way to describe this using Newtonian physics (we don't have general covariance in Newtonian physics, so it all becomes much simpler). Now, even given the gauge freedoms in GR, all co-ordinate systems will converge for small distances to satisfy the equivalence principle. Hence, the Newtonian description tells you clearly how the underlying physical mechanism are at play, in a way free from co-ordinate transformations. You don't even need to define any co-ordinates, you can just use words, but when you do so you are using words that have a direct physical meaning; gravity, motion etc.

On the other hand, when you wrap everything into a(t) and repeat the phrase 'expansion of space' to explain anything without any context you aren't learning, teaching or understanding anything more than the properties of one arbitrary foliation of the FRW space-time.

I'm not against the use of the phrase 'expansion of space' or the analogies that go along with it, I just object to their mis-use in contexts where it is not appropriate. When someone has asked how gravity and motion play a role in redshift, then this is clearly not the time to be invoking this concept.
 
  • #29
Wallace said:
The only reason any of this got at all convoluted is because you were incorrectly applying Newtonian physics,
I was never even touching on Newtonian physics in the discussion.
 
  • #30
Wallace said:
:sigh: I should know better than to continue, but "Once more unto the breach"...

For my part, I think it is worth explaining this point as often as necessary. The trick is to remain relaxed about repeating it every time; because it will probably be a new perspective for at least some readers each time you explain it again.

I'm speaking up here, because it was a previous time you explained this that represents for me one of the latest AHA moments which come at me from time to time as I'm trying to deepen my own understanding. Grasping this point has meant several aspects of cosmology and relativity now click together better for me.

Cheers -- sylas
 
  • #31
Posts #17 and #19. You were commenting and making predictions based on the Doppler + gravitational explanation Ich and I gave ("whereas by your claim" etc). In doing so you incorrectly applied basic Newtonian physics, making a false prediction and thus claiming that the physics was in error.
 
  • #32
sylas said:
The trick is to remain relaxed about repeating it every time

:approve: I try, I really do!

The problem is that there are some very bad misconceptions thouroughly ingrained in the modern pop-sci view of cosmology. It is so very difficult to remove some of these, because there is a constant feedback loop of people telling each other they are so right about an entire false lexicon that has replaced understanding of physics with a canonical verbal description at odds with some fundamental (and very important!) concepts in GR.

Then again I do have a tendency to suffer from http://xkcd.com/386/" [Broken] syndrome :grumpy:
 
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  • #33
Wallace said:
Posts #17 and #19. You were commenting and making predictions based on the Doppler + gravitational explanation Ich and I gave ("whereas by your claim" etc). In doing so you incorrectly applied basic Newtonian physics, making a false prediction and thus claiming that the physics was in error.
Well, no. Post #17 was merely pointing out that this description doesn't make intuitive sense. In post #19, since I am perhaps not used to dealing with a Newtonian approximation (as in this case it's often even easier to just do the full GR calculation), I chose as a reference point the point of symmetry: the turnaround, at which point the photon was equidistant between emission and absorption. I didn't fully explain this, and it's my fault for doing so. But this is why I really don't like these sorts of descriptions: how much of the redshift or blueshift is contributed by velocity vs. gravity is entirely dependent upon what coordinates you use.

So even though these descriptions may provide the impression of understanding, they don't provide any real understanding because none of the extra statements made are non-arbitrary (e.g. gravitational vs. doppler redshift).
 
  • #34
anya2 said:
While objects closer to us tend to shift both in direction red or blue, depending on their movement in relation to us, distant objects such as galaxies tend to only shift to the red.

As I understand this is the base of the idea that the universe is expanding. But how are we sure that is the case, and redshifts are not due to the gravitational pull of all those objects that lie between us and the observed objects?

Chalnoth said:
In any case, these things are vastly easier to understand if you just take them in co-moving coordinates, where both the emitter and observer are stationary (up to local peculiar velocities). In co-moving coordinates, the only source of redshift is the overall expansion, and so the redshift is simply:

[tex]z + 1 = \frac{a_{obs}}{a_{emit}}[/tex]

Wallace said:
But hang on, we know that we can always just use these co-ordinates. The question is what the hell do they mean? ...
Writing down a simple relation, and really understanding what that means are two vastly different things.

Chalnoth said:
I guess I just don't see those sorts of questions as very productive. There are so vastly many ways of looking at the situation that one can't say that they mean anyone particular thing in these terms. So I'd rather just go by the simplest explanation, which is that the photons are expanded along with space.

Wallace said:
Well then I have to disagree. When you say 'photons are expanded along with space' you are talking about something that is only true for one specific set of co-ordinates and you also imply a false causality; that there is a physical effect called 'expansion of space' which causes photons to stretch.

...
Again, I go back to the OP. It was asked whether motion and/or gravity is responsible for the observed redshift of galaxies. How does writing down 1 + z = a/a_0 and saying 'the photons get stretched by expanding space' answer this question? Redshift can be understood in simple well understood terms like motion and gravity, I see no reason to force people to abandon these intuitive notions in favour of a co-ordinate dependant mathematical function which has no universal physical meaning.

It depends on what we are trying to help people with. If you want to learn how to calculate cosmological quantities, then you need to learn the maths behind co-moving co-ordinates, and learn the easiest way to make calculations. If someone wants to a good non-mathematical intuitive understanding in terms of familiar concepts, then this is clearly not the best way to go.

Interesting discussion. I note that Chalnoth did not say 'the photons get stretched by expanding space'

and what Chalnoth did say does not, as far as I can see, imply a false causality; that there is a physical effect called 'expansion of space' which causes photons to stretch.

What it seems to me that Chalnoth did do was give a straightforward response to the OP by confirming what anya already offered as an intuitive explanation. That expansion of wavelength correlates pretty much exactly with expansion of distance (that occurred while light was in transit.)
This is a relation which I believe we do well to stress to newcomers, before delving into more complicated matters. It refers to the standard FRW metric and standard model cosmo.
 
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  • #35
Wallace said:
The OP asked how motion and or gravity is responsible for causing redshift, which is a very reasonable question. Simply stating the above equation tells you how to calculate it, but it doesn't tell you what that means and doesn't answer the question. Reducing everything to the effect of 'the overall expansion' leaves you at square one; what precisely is that motion, and how does it cause redshift?
Right. This boils down to a little exercise in differential geometry. I have already had a discussion how
to do this exercise in another thread last year, and I see no reason to reiterate it here. Rather I give part of
the result, which is that for FRW models with flat or spherical spatial sections, the contribution to spectral shift
from motion in flat space-time is 0%, and the contribution from space-time curvature is 100%.

Another way of arriving at this result can be found in arXiv:0911.1205. Using the fact that the geometry of
the FRW models is preserved under certain holonomy transformations that change the topology,
it is shown that the interpretation of spectral shift as a Doppler shift in flat space-time leads to a
mathematical contradiction if the spatial sections are flat or spherical. This applies to all distances, i.e.,
for arbitrary close comoving observers.
Wallace said:
Ich and I explained how you can understand the interplay between motion and gravity by looking at how the more familiar Newtonian physics gives you the same answer, but more obviously demonstrates how both motion and gravity are both at work, even in a homogenous universe.
Unfortunately, your explanation is in general mathematically inconsistent with the geometry of the FRW
models.
Wallace said:
Writing down a simple relation, and really understanding what that means are two vastly different things.
Sure. But are you absolutely certain that you have understood this relation yourself?
 
Last edited:
<h2>1. What is the difference between expansion redshift and gravitational redshift?</h2><p>Expansion redshift refers to the stretching of light waves as they travel through the expanding universe, causing them to appear redder than they actually are. Gravitational redshift, on the other hand, is caused by the warping of spacetime by massive objects, which also results in a shift towards the red end of the light spectrum.</p><h2>2. How are expansion redshift and gravitational redshift measured?</h2><p>Expansion redshift is measured using the redshift parameter, z, which is determined by comparing the observed wavelength of light from a distant object to its known rest wavelength. Gravitational redshift is measured by comparing the frequency of light from a source at different distances from a massive object.</p><h2>3. Which phenomenon is responsible for the redshift observed in the light from distant galaxies?</h2><p>Both expansion redshift and gravitational redshift contribute to the overall redshift observed in the light from distant galaxies. However, the dominant factor is expansion redshift, as the universe is constantly expanding and causing light waves to stretch as they travel through it.</p><h2>4. How does the redshift of light provide evidence for the expansion of the universe?</h2><p>The redshift of light is directly related to the expansion of the universe, as the further a galaxy is from us, the faster it appears to be moving away due to the expansion of space. This can be seen in the redshift of light from distant galaxies, which is used to calculate the rate of expansion of the universe.</p><h2>5. Can expansion redshift and gravitational redshift be used to determine the distance to a galaxy?</h2><p>Yes, both expansion redshift and gravitational redshift can be used to determine the distance to a galaxy. Expansion redshift is used to measure the galaxy's cosmological redshift, which is then used to calculate its distance based on the expansion rate of the universe. Gravitational redshift can also be used, but it is typically only significant for objects that are very close to massive objects, such as stars in our own galaxy.</p>

1. What is the difference between expansion redshift and gravitational redshift?

Expansion redshift refers to the stretching of light waves as they travel through the expanding universe, causing them to appear redder than they actually are. Gravitational redshift, on the other hand, is caused by the warping of spacetime by massive objects, which also results in a shift towards the red end of the light spectrum.

2. How are expansion redshift and gravitational redshift measured?

Expansion redshift is measured using the redshift parameter, z, which is determined by comparing the observed wavelength of light from a distant object to its known rest wavelength. Gravitational redshift is measured by comparing the frequency of light from a source at different distances from a massive object.

3. Which phenomenon is responsible for the redshift observed in the light from distant galaxies?

Both expansion redshift and gravitational redshift contribute to the overall redshift observed in the light from distant galaxies. However, the dominant factor is expansion redshift, as the universe is constantly expanding and causing light waves to stretch as they travel through it.

4. How does the redshift of light provide evidence for the expansion of the universe?

The redshift of light is directly related to the expansion of the universe, as the further a galaxy is from us, the faster it appears to be moving away due to the expansion of space. This can be seen in the redshift of light from distant galaxies, which is used to calculate the rate of expansion of the universe.

5. Can expansion redshift and gravitational redshift be used to determine the distance to a galaxy?

Yes, both expansion redshift and gravitational redshift can be used to determine the distance to a galaxy. Expansion redshift is used to measure the galaxy's cosmological redshift, which is then used to calculate its distance based on the expansion rate of the universe. Gravitational redshift can also be used, but it is typically only significant for objects that are very close to massive objects, such as stars in our own galaxy.

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