How to prove the stretching of space

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In summary: If you measure the frequency of a light signal as it travels through space, you'll find that the frequency of the signal has shifted. This shift is called the cosmological redshift. According to several scientists, among them J.A.Peacock of the University of Portsmouth in the United Kingdom, the cosmological redshift is not a sign that space is expanding, but is instead the result of a combined kinematic/gravitational effect. Peacock is author of the book "Cosmological Physics".
  • #71
ConformalGrpOp said:
I appreciate the contributions that have been made to this thread. I found it helpful and stimulating, especially in confirming my view that a large percentage of cosmologists misconceive the concept of expanding space, space stretching, etc.
I would say this is completely wrong. Most cosmologists use an entirely accurate picture of the expanding universe. That there are other, equally-accurate pictures is irrelevant to this fact, and doesn't mean most cosmologists are misunderstanding something.
 
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  • #72
Hi Chalnoth, I'm not one to quibble about such things, and certainly not with the attribution of my comment to " a large percentage" cosmologists (as opposed to "most"). The comment might have been better taken if I made no such particular attribution and simple noted that the misconception is prominent in the field. But, here too, I was speaking to the idea that empty space has physical properties (a new "force-like" characteristic), which is implied in the notion that "space" stretches. This is distinct from the concept of an "expanding" universe, which is perfectly consistent with the physical implications of the standard model.

In this regard, I would simply quote Weinberg on this subject:

"[H]ow is it possible for space, which is utterly empty, to expand? How can nothing expand? The answer is: space does not expand. Cosmologists sometimes talk about expanding space, but they should know better."

But then again, I could be "completely wrong."

Cheers!
 
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  • #73
Naty, in general, I would agree that, in some sense, we are talking about a distinction without a difference in cosmological terms. The distinction is made to emphasize the nature of the red shift due to the Hubble relation. But, there are galactic systems which are in relative motion to us separate and apart from that due to "Hubble flow". Accordingly, the spectra of the light observed from these bodies will exhibit doppler shifts distinct from the red shift due to the Hubble relation.
 
  • #74
ConformalGrpOp said:
In this regard, I would simply quote Weinberg on this subject:

"[H]ow is it possible for space, which is utterly empty, to expand? How can nothing expand? The answer is: space does not expand. Cosmologists sometimes talk about expanding space, but they should know better."
I'd have to see a lot more context to know exactly what he was saying here. But suffice it to say that the description of the evolution of the universe as expanding space is quite accurate. There are other accurate descriptions, but that is one. And in practice, that way of describing how the universe has changed over time doesn't seem to lead to many practical errors (except for the occasional person that doesn't realize that the expansion is an average effect that does not occur in gravitationally-bound systems).
 
  • #75
Chalnoth said:
But suffice it to say that the description of the evolution of the universe as expanding space is quite accurate.

It appears that we are working with a common understanding of what cosmologists mean by expanding space. That is, you don't seem to be suggesting that the increase in the "volume" of the "expanding" Universe is the result of (caused by) a physical (force-like) property of empty space.

I take Weinstein's comment to arise from the insight that it is the presence of matter/energy in space which defines the universe. It is only meaningful to state that it is matter/energy that is "flowing" in the models of an expanding universe, and that the statement that "empty space" is "flowing" and expanding in all directions has no physical meaning. Empty space doesn't flow and we do not attempt to measure any characteristic of empty space's nothingness to prove that this nothingness is the source of some physically relevant effect.

It is meaningful to say, in a physical sense, that the distances (the space) between celestial bodies is increasing over time based on our observation of physical events involving matter and energy. It is in this sense that we can say that such "space" is expanding.

In this regard, the analogy of the rising bread dough (expanding space) which "carries" the raisins (matter) out in all directions (before the whole thing is placed in the oven) can be misleading.
 
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  • #76
ConformalGrpOp said:
It is only meaningful to state that it is matter/energy that is "flowing" in the models of an expanding universe, and that the statement that "empty space" is "flowing" and expanding in all directions has no physical meaning. Empty space doesn't flow and we do not attempt to measure to measure any characteristic of empty space's nothingness to prove that this nothingness is the source of some physically relevant effect.ing.
Let's have a look on the empty FRW-Universe. Though being empty it's metric is expanding, regardless whether or not one imagines massless testparticles, whose distances are increasing. The particles are helpful to have a vision of the "flow", but they don't create it.

One can moreover imagine a large non-expanding (due to internal forces) ruler. Then you can visualize the increasing distances between the particles traveling along the ruler. The volume of the cube defined by the ruler isn't interpretable, but the increasing distances are (expansion vs. motion), as pointed out several times by Chalnoth. Admittedly in the case of the empty universe it seems much easier to interpret the recession of "galaxies" as being due to a motion, because in the Milne model, which is equivalent to the empty FRW model, the redshift is purely a Doppler shift.
 
  • #77
timmdeeg said:
The particles are helpful to have a vision of the "flow", but they don't create it.

I suppose one might be able to say that, in the FRW model, the particles are "of" the flow, and to the extent they arise out of the original conditions and instability that produced the flow, in a sense, they are material to it. How their existence in some sense might "affect" the flow is something that is beyond my pay grade to consider, if its worth considering at all.

I've been reading Relativity Gravitation and World Structure (along with Cunningham's The Principle of Relativity. Last night, by happenstance, I come across a comment by Milne on the question of the "flow" which is pertinent to the discussion. He writes,

"In assigning structure to space, in restoring structure to the structurelessness, mathematical physicists had in effect reintroduced an ether."

Then in a footnote, he remarked:

"This is illustrated by Sir James Jean's remark that the great nebulae are 'mere straws floating in the stream of space', which 'ought to show us in what way, if any, its currents are flowing'."

Just as an aside, in my estimation, the value of this forum would be inestimably diminished but for the willingness of contributors such as Chalnoth and others to offer their knowledge and insights for the benefit of everyone.
 
  • #78
Conformal:

I take Weinstein's comment to arise from the insight that it is the presence of matter/energy in space which defines the universe. It is only meaningful to state that it is matter/energy that is "flowing" in the models of an expanding universe, and that the statement that "empty space" is "flowing" and expanding in all directions has no physical meaning. Empty space doesn't flow and we do not attempt to measure any characteristic of empty space's nothingness to prove that this nothingness is the source of some physically relevant effect.

The idea of 'matter/energy' flowing seems ok...

but "empty space doesn't flow"...well, yeah, but who says that?? If you are saying 'empty space' is a lousy descriptive term, ok. but few people take the view space is 'empty'...space isn't empty, so whether you like the word 'space' or 'matter/energy' seems a matter of semantics...

second, the cosmological GR model is based on the flow of a 'perfect fluid' flow with varying pressures and densities...[or matter/energy in your terms] so what is described via the model should not be viewed as 'empty' anything.

good discussion!
 
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  • #79
ConformalGrpOp said:
It appears that we are working with a common understanding of what cosmologists mean by expanding space. That is, you don't seem to be suggesting that the increase in the "volume" of the "expanding" Universe is the result of (caused by) a physical (force-like) property of empty space.
Let me try to be more clear: most cosmologists simply understand the mathematical way of describing the expanding universe, and do not concern themselves with any worries over how to translate that into words. That is, they only care that their equations work out, and consider it to be a pointless exercise to quibble over semantic arguments. And most cosmologists do, indeed, correctly apply the math in most cases.
 
  • #80
Chalnoth said:
Let me try to be more clear: most cosmologists simply understand the mathematical way of describing the expanding universe, and do not concern themselves with any worries over how to translate that into words. That is, they only care that their equations work out, and consider it to be a pointless exercise to quibble over semantic arguments. And most cosmologists do, indeed, correctly apply the math in most cases.

This makes perfect sense to me.
 
  • #81
timmdeeg said:
Okay, thanks, you gave me a better understanding of Chodorowski's paper.

And I want to thank all participants of this thread for helpful comments.

So, in simple words, one should use the notion of 'expanding space' with some care, as the 'stretching or the creation of space' is not measurable, or perhaps better per se is physically not meaningful.
Then the demystfied version could be the conclusion, "that the expansion of space is neither more or less than the increase over time of the distance between observers at rest with respect to the cosmic fluid", referring to the author's of the paper Expanding Space: The Root of all Evil?. The knowledge of the increasing distances results from the cosmological redshifts, which depend only on the space-time curvature. I hope, that's correct so far.

This is consistent with my understanding of the explanation of the red shift phenomenon in the FRW model; to wit, "..cosmological red shift is not, as is often implied, a gradual process caused by the stretching of the space a photon is traveling through. Rather, cosmological red shift is caused by the photon being observed in a different frame to that which it is emitted."

The key point, in terms of interpreting the results from the model is that what is relevant is that "the difference between frames relates to a changing background metric rather than a differing velocity."

As I understand the subject, this insight gets to the root of a fundamental issue about the red shift; that is, if light propagates with respect to the source with a metric that is Minkowskian, then the red shift can be understood as a characteristic time dilation with respect to the frame of the observer in an expanding universe.

This would seem to justify the proper distinction that is made between a doppler shift and a cosmological shift. That is to say, in the case of a doppler shift, the scale of the distance between the source and the observer in relative motion to one another is irrelevant to the red shift observed. In contrast, it is precisely the existence of the dependence of the observed red shift on distance that defines the Hubble relation.

(Note: all quotes in this post are from "Expanding space: Root of all Evil")
 
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  • #82
When trying to image an expanding timespace frame, let's not neglect that matter itself occupies space and this space too would be accelerating into the 4th dimension. Matter's volume would increase concurrently with surrounding space. It would be virtually undetectable in any give temporal frame of reference. Gravity and time would be the only perceived effects.

The 4th dimension battle is between entropy and inertia.

This tendency towards entropy would be inflation's driving force. Gravity is thus a fictitious force as matter coalesces due to non-uniform expansion rates. Distortions in the rate of inflation at the quantum level will culminate away from space with higher inflation rates that are devoid of other matter and cause itself to spatially move through 3 dimensional space towards higher matter density regions.

As matter still expands and gathers, more inertia induced drag to inflation is created. Matter itself is setting the rate towards entropy (localized time). Culminations of matter will continue to slow entropy until a singularities is achieved.
 
  • #83
wdevlin said:
When trying to image an expanding timespace frame, let's not neglect that matter itself occupies space and this space too would be accelerating into the 4th dimension. Matter's volume would increase concurrently with surrounding space. It would be virtually undetectable in any give temporal frame of reference. Gravity and time would be the only perceived effects.

The 4th dimension battle is between entropy and inertia.

This tendency towards entropy would be inflation's driving force. Gravity is thus a fictitious force as matter coalesces due to non-uniform expansion rates. Distortions in the rate of inflation at the quantum level will culminate away from space with higher inflation rates that are devoid of other matter and cause itself to spatially move through 3 dimensional space towards higher matter density regions.

As matter still expands and gathers, more inertia induced drag to inflation is created. Matter itself is setting the rate towards entropy (localized time). Culminations of matter will continue to slow entropy until a singularities is achieved.

The entirety of your post sounds like nonsense to me. Do you have some sort of reference that supports your view on expanding matter and the rest of your post?
 
  • #84
wdevlin said:
Gravity is thus a fictitious force as matter coalesces due to non-uniform expansion rates.

I just sat down on a fictitious chair to look at my collection of fictitious Chrondites, Octahedrites, Howardites and Tektites, all of which prove that gravity is a fictitious force arising as matter coalesces due to non-uniform expansion rates.

When it gets to the point where it is permissible to label as a fiction a physical phenomenon which, using the analytical apparatus of scientific investigation, we are able to (a) measure as a force encountered in nature and (b) predict the effects of that force on matter, one might suppose that physics will cease to be a useful intellectual endeavor.
 
  • #86
Thanks Devlin, great link. Roughly how many Cosmologists are there today worldwide working in the field?
 
  • #87
Tanelorn said:
Thanks Devlin, great link. Roughly how many Cosmologists are there today worldwide working in the field?

Professional Cosmologist?
Not including any resent Chinese involvement, I would say no more than 100. That's an estimation based on the amount of published work I've come across since my early education by Sagan:)
 
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  • #88
I looked at that site you posted. Looks to me that much of what he' s saying is outdated. Not to mention misleading.
 
  • #89
wdevlin said:
Professional Cosmologist?
Not including any resent Chinese involvement, I would say no more than 100. That's an estimation based on the amount of published work I've come across since my early formal education by Sagan.
In all of cosmology? There are at least three times that working on the Planck satellite alone. I'd wager to guess there are in the range of 10,000 in total, perhaps more. Though I suppose the lines blur a bit between astronomers and cosmologists, and if you're only talking about theoretical cosmologists the number is much smaller (probably only a couple thousand).
 
  • #90
Mordred said:
I looked at that site you posted. Looks to me that much of what he' s saying is outdated. Not to mention misleading.

Being that books on the subject of Eternal Inflation by Andrei Linde and David H. Lyth can cost $100 (and which I can only previewed);
Do you have any up-to-date, more accurate material on the subject?
 
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<h2>1. How do we know that space is stretching?</h2><p>Scientists have observed the phenomenon of redshift in light from distant galaxies, which is a result of the stretching of space. This is known as the cosmological redshift and is one of the key pieces of evidence for the expansion of the universe.</p><h2>2. What is the evidence for the stretching of space?</h2><p>In addition to the cosmological redshift, scientists also use the cosmic microwave background radiation and the observed distribution of galaxies to support the theory of the stretching of space. These observations show a uniform expansion of the universe in all directions.</p><h2>3. How does the stretching of space affect the objects within it?</h2><p>The stretching of space does not have a noticeable effect on objects within our own galaxy, as the force of gravity is strong enough to hold them together. However, on a larger scale, the stretching of space can cause the distances between galaxies to increase over time.</p><h2>4. Can we measure the stretching of space?</h2><p>Yes, scientists use a unit called the Hubble constant to measure the rate of expansion of the universe. This constant is determined by measuring the redshift of light from distant galaxies and comparing it to their known distances.</p><h2>5. What does the stretching of space mean for the future of the universe?</h2><p>Based on current observations, it is believed that the stretching of space will continue and eventually lead to the "heat death" of the universe, where all matter and energy will be evenly spread out and the universe will reach a state of maximum entropy.</p>

1. How do we know that space is stretching?

Scientists have observed the phenomenon of redshift in light from distant galaxies, which is a result of the stretching of space. This is known as the cosmological redshift and is one of the key pieces of evidence for the expansion of the universe.

2. What is the evidence for the stretching of space?

In addition to the cosmological redshift, scientists also use the cosmic microwave background radiation and the observed distribution of galaxies to support the theory of the stretching of space. These observations show a uniform expansion of the universe in all directions.

3. How does the stretching of space affect the objects within it?

The stretching of space does not have a noticeable effect on objects within our own galaxy, as the force of gravity is strong enough to hold them together. However, on a larger scale, the stretching of space can cause the distances between galaxies to increase over time.

4. Can we measure the stretching of space?

Yes, scientists use a unit called the Hubble constant to measure the rate of expansion of the universe. This constant is determined by measuring the redshift of light from distant galaxies and comparing it to their known distances.

5. What does the stretching of space mean for the future of the universe?

Based on current observations, it is believed that the stretching of space will continue and eventually lead to the "heat death" of the universe, where all matter and energy will be evenly spread out and the universe will reach a state of maximum entropy.

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