Space Drifter said:
For example when we measure the redshift of a distant star, what is that redshift in relation to? Is it the speed that it's moving away from us?
Yes. That and the fact that space itself has expanded since that moment time the light ray was emitted, until the time the ray arrived at Earth. This expansion contributes to a sort of
stretching of the wave, giving it a redshift. On cosmological distances, the majority of the redshift of far away galaxies is due to this sort of redshift -- caused by expanding space. That's in addition to any redshift (or blueshift) caused by said object moving
through space relative to us.
Or the speed that it's moving away from the origin point of the big bang?
There is no such thing as the "origin point" of the big bang. The big bang happened everywhere at once (perhaps quite literally -- out to infinite distances, but at the very least, distances far greater than our observable universe). The big bang happened where you are sitting right now, just as it happened 40 billion light years away from you (of course, any object at a distance 40 billion light years away from you now was a lot closer back then).
Or is it some sort of absolute speed that can be measure irrespective of any relative marker points? The latter is what I cannot understand.
In relativity, both special and general, there are no absolute speeds. There are no absolute markers. Everything is in relation to arbitrarily defined coordinate systems, which in practice is in relation to other objects (other galaxies for example). All velocities are relative, is the point.
I mean, if time moves slower closer to massive objects and faster when away from strong gravitational pull, that seems to say that speed MUST be relative to other objects. No?
Velocity only means anything when it is relative to some other object (or objects).
And finally, the idea that the speed of light is constant, no matter the speed of its observer. That seems related to this whole topic of absolute speed.
Keep in mind that in relativity, there is no such thing as absolute simultaneity either. (Neglecting that idea might be a source of confusion.) If
you measure two events happening at the same time, but separated by a distance, another observer (moving at a velocity relative to your own) may measure the same events at different times from each other (i.e. events did not happen at the same time), and separated by different distances than you measured.
If you are in a spaceship with a clock, in an inertial reference frame (a frame of reference which is not accelerating), and some other guy speeds past you in a spaceship with a clock, also in an inertial reference frame (but different velocity than your own, obviously), you will measure his clock going slower than yours. He will measure
your clock going slower than his. Both measurements are equally correct. Neither measurement is any more special than the other. The clocks won't tick at the same rate (and stay that way) until one of you turns around, accelerating in the process, such that you are both in the same inertial frame (i.e. traveling at the same constant velocity).
But while you're drifting relative to each other, it doesn't make any sense to say who is moving and who is not. You know that the both of you are moving
relative to each other (that much you know). And that's it.