Originally posted by dlgoff
What about the universe expansion rate? Wouldn't its instantaneous velocity be absolute?
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?s=&postid=137931#post137931
you suggest looking at the "instantaneous velocity" of expansion
but the distant galaxies are all receding at different rates depending on how far away they are
the more distant they are the faster they recede away from us.
so this is not a good way to get an absolute standard of speed
(recession speeds being all different)
but we don't need another absolute speed standard besides the one we alreay have----we already got c.
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from your question I can filter out two questions actually
A. is there an absolute standard of speed? (answer is Yes)
B. is there a special distinguished frame of reference
that can be used to measure speeds?
an intrinsic idea of being "at rest" in the universe?
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cosmologists often use the expansion of the universe ("Hubble flow") to define an absolute rest frame
this corresponds to the one russ_watters mentioned: the CMB frame
the solar system is said to be moving 370 km/s in the direction of the constellation Leo
with respect to the Microwave Background and that is the same as saying that it is moving 370 km/s in the direction of Leo
with respect to the Hubble flow.
I can get some links, the speed was measured by COBE satellite and before that by a Lawrence Lab U-2 airplane observatory.
This is the 1996 report of the COBE project
that determined our speed to be 370 km/s
http://arxiv.org/astro-ph/9601151
This shows a starmap with the hotspot in Leo made by the U-2 airplane:
http://aether.lbl.gov/www/projects/u2/
If you are at rest with respect to Background that means that there is no doppler hotspot in one part of the sky caused by your moving towards it and no doppler coldspot the other way caused by your moving away from it-----in all directions the Background looks the same wavelength mix, the same temperature.
if you are at rest with respect to the Hubble flow that means in all directions you see the distant galaxies are receding at the same rates (which are greater the more distant they are)
so the expansion around you looks uniform or symmetrical or as they say "isotropic". If there are people living in other galaxies then they also have access to this simple universal idea of being at rest
and being at rest with respect to expansion process (Hubble flow) is the same as being at rest with respect to Backgound.
it is a very useful reference frame for cosmologists so in their papers you will see velocities given sometimes relative to this frame
I will try to find a link to illustrate.
http://www.arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0210165
this says our local group of galaxies is moving 627 km/s
with respect to Background (CMB)