TeV said:
Nereid,how preceisely today astrophyicists could distinguish photon red shift of a massive quasar due to it's fast moving from the gravitational red shift of the photon emitted from the same quasar?
Excellent question TeV, really first-rate!
I'm more than a little rusty on the details of this story, so I may need to revise or extend my post here once I've done some digging. But, here goes (imagine my usual caveats about (over-)simplification and general summary only and (some) details really do matter have all been said).
If all you could 'see' of a quasar were a point source, and its spectrum had just a few absorbsion lines, with one or two Ly\alpha (or H\alpha) lines at lower red-shift, it would be 'impossible'. And in the early days, the sum total of high quality data wasn't much more than that (indeed, for quite a long time some astronomers held to the non-Hubble redshift view as to the cause).
In a nutshell, the question was resolved by huge numbers of observations, as many questions in astronomy are. Some of the main (classes), in no particular order (and certainly not historical order!):
- quasars reside in galaxies, some of which seem perfectly 'normal' otherwise
- the redshifts of the underlying galaxies is the same as that of the quasars at their heart
- some of the inter-galactic clouds of hydrogen, inferred from the Lyman forest, were detected independently
- quasars, AGN, and Seyfert galaxies (and more) came to be seen as essentially the same 'beast', seen from different perspectives, and at different ages
- ... and AGN and Seyferts showed no sign of the sorts of supermassive body needed to create the observed redshift
- if the observed redshift were due to gravity, the amount of mass would be far, far greater than was otherwise observed ('in the neighbourhood', so to speak)
- ... or the mechanism for generating the intensity of observed photons ('light') beyond any conceivable physics
- (included in the two above - limits on the physical size of the quasar 'engine' implied by shortest time-scale of observed, significant variability; and other lines of evidence)
Which parts cry out for further details or explanation?