Starwatcher16 said:
I've heard it said that it is impossible to determine an objects absolute velocity, all one can do is find it relative to some other object...
but, if the CMB is everywhere, why could you not just measure the doppler shift in all directions, and adjust your velocity so the CMB has no doppler shift in any direction? Wouldn't this tell you that your absolute velocity is 0?
Sure. There is no problem with what you say. In effect, astronomers do this. They
deduct the solar system's motion from the data, when making measurements that our motion relative to CMB would mess up.
How it works is the CMB has an average temperature over the whole sky. Around 2.73 kelvin (exact figure doesn't matter.) But in a certain direction (marked by the constellation Leo in the sky) the temperature is a fraction of a percent hotter----the wavelengths are a fraction of a percent shorter. Roughly a tenth of a percent.
What this means is the solar system is moving in the direction of Leo, relative to CMB, at that same fraction of speed of light (roughly a tenth of a percent). So in cases where our individual motion would distort things, they deduct that motion, or correct for it, so that it gets taken out of the data. And then the data is just as if we were observing from AT REST relative CMB.
That is just what you were talking about, you imagined an observer at "absolute" rest, where absolute means relative to the CMB.
It is a good perspective to imagine taking.
Actually the solar system is moving about 370 kilometers per second relative to CMB, and the Earth is orbiting at a speed of about 30 km/s.
But with the help of a computer we can correct for all that giddy motion and effectively take a look at the universe as though we were standing still.
Nothing is "absolute" in some extreme philosophical sense, but the CMB is a pretty good substitute, as your post suggests. It is the light from the matter of the early universe which was nearly uniformly spread out, in a hot cloud, and all at nearly the same temperature----at the time it was about 3000 kelvin (before that the cloud was too hot and too dense so the light was kind of trapped in the fog, we only see light from when it cooled to 3000 and became transparent). So that uniform cloud of ancient matter, roughly the same everywhere in all directions, is what we are taking as our reference when we measure our motion relative CMB.