art pletcher said:
I understand that the force of gravity prevents galaxies from expanding, as space increases. However, I question if universal expansion separates photons (electromagnetism), as they are traveling along parallel paths (Would the normal distance between them increase over time)? Thank you.
art pletcher said:
I am changing this question to:
Would two photons, unbounded by gravity, become separated from the universal expansion?
Thank you
Hi Art, I don't see what's so hard about the question. the way you stated it first seems clear enough. Excuse me for not responding earlier, I was busy and I don't always read everything as soon as it's posted. BTW I'm not an expert---just an amateur on-looker who likes Cosmology and Quantum Gravity research a lot.
You know in cosmology there is a CMB rest criterion and a universe time also called Friedmann time. that's how one can define proper distance. the distance you'd measure if you could pause the expansion process at a particular moment of universe time to allow you to measure it.
Ned Wright describes measuring proper distance with a string of observers all at CMB rest, with their clocks synchronized, all at one agreed on moment measuring the distances between them. that's another way to think of it. In any case it's well-defined.
My point is the concept of "parallel" can be made meaningful in cosmology using universe time (the standard time the Friedmann model runs on, and which everybody in cosmology uses) and proper distance (also a standard construct that everybody uses---the Hubble law is defined in terms of proper time)
Anyway just for concreteness imagine you have 4 galaxies which are widely separated and at a particular moment of universe time they form a SQUARE, call them A, B, C, and D and they have observers A, B, C, and D stationed at them. the observers can check that the angles are 90 degrees. (assuming spatial flatness) or (assuming uniform curvature and near flatness) at least that the proper distances are all something, say 1 billion LY, along the sides.
So at that moment in time observer A sends a flash of light aimed at B and observer C sends a flash of light aimed at D.
Clearly the light beams start out parallel.
the light is traveling along geodesics, shortest distance paths from A to B and from C to D.
It is going to eventually arrive at B and at D because it was aimed at them.
And when the light flashes arrive at the two destinations they will be farther apart than they were at the start, due to distance expansion.
So everything is well-defined and the answer to your question is yes, expansion does increase the distance between parallel light beams.