jowjowman said:
...The use of the word recombination puzzeles me.
As I understand it is supposed to describe the recombination of eletrons and
positrons of our well known ligther atoms. But these particels have never ever
been combined before. So why the word recombination?
You are right. Everybody realizes it is a bad choice of word, for the reason you point out.
Scientific terms come about sometimes accidentally and then they take root in the literature.
Big Bang is another example, we have it because of historical reasons even though it is not a good description of the event (the beginning of expansion).
It misleads people because it makes them think of the explosion of some kind of bomb in the middle of some empty space, but we keep on using this misleading term, because it caught on. Once a word takes hold in a language it is very hard to correct it.
At the time of recombination photons started to travel in all different directions.
I assume this happened everywere at the same time. Then we would expect
to detect photons that has traveled a shorter distance in the expanding universe
than others. So, have the CMB photons different redshift?
No, all the CMB photons have almost exactly the same redshift---about z = 1090.
The event called recombination happened at a particular time, all at very nearly the same time. The redshift formula is
z+1 = (size of universe now)/(size of universe then)
more exactly we should say
scale factor a(t) instead of size of universe. the universe may not have a finite size but it does have a scale factor, an increasing function of time, which is built into the usual metric by which we measure distances.
z + 1 = a(now)/a(then) = a(now when light received)/a(then when light emitted)
This is the standard equation governing the cosmological redshift which one learns around the first lecture in a cosmology course. It is basic. In effect, the wavelengths of the wave expand along with the distances between galaxies.
z+1 is the ratio of expansion. If z = 2 it means that the wavelength is 3 times longer.
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the photons all come from stuff that is the same distance away, because the CMB photons from nearer already came and passed by us, and the CMB photons from farther stuff have not gotten here yet.
All the photons we are detecting at present came from stuff that was around 41 million LY when it emitted (and happened to emit some light in our direction) and that stuff is now about 45 billion LY from us. Neither the stuff nor we have moved. Both are assumed stationary. the distance has simply increased. (as in the balloon analogy---everybody keeps the same latitude longitude, only separation distances increase)
the location of the stuff whose CMB light we are now receiving is shown in the balloon example earlier by that red circle painted on the balloon at a certain radius from the Milkyway dot that is us. technically the location of the stuff whose light we are getting now as CMB photons is called "the surface of last scattering"
as time goes on, the surface of last scattering expands outwards, as we hear from matter that is farther and farther away. At the present time it is a sphere of radius 45 billion LY. Make sure this is clear and ask questions if it is not.