Murphy625
- 10
- 1
- TL;DR
- standard candle question
Hello, it's been a while since I've posted. Me (big dumb dumb) has a question.
Astronomers use Type 1A supernovas to gauge distance because these type of supernovas are generally all the same brightness due to the way they happen (hence the moniker Standard Candle).. White dwarf sucks hydrogen from a binary, reaches a critical mass, and boom. The explosions of these supernova are generally all the same brightness so we can calculate the distance to them based on how dim they appear to be from our position.
My question: Do we have (for lack of a better term) a standard speedometer? Would it be reasonable to assume that the ejecta material from the Type 1A supernova would all travel at the same speed as well? Could we measure the rate of expansion of the ionized gas from a Type 1A supernova?
I was thinking that the density of the interstellar medium around such an explosion would have some affect on the speed of the ejecta material, but I'm not sure how much effect it would have.
Now the part you're going to think is silly and makes me a dumb dumb. I've been reading about dark energy, dark matter, and the general history of why we think these things exist. Been reading on this subject for over ten years.. It makes no sense to me that the universe is only ~5% visible matter and the rest is magical invisible stuff we can't see.. Applying the principles of Occam's Razor, the simplest explanation is usually the correct one.
Could we have time dilation wrong? We're observing the universe from a gravity well (Earth), which is inside a gravity well (Our Sun), which itself is inside a gravity well (Milky Way Galaxy).. I think the technical term for what I'm describing is "constructive interference". Time slows down when you're in a gravity well.. which means to the observer in the gravity well, everything outside looks like it's moving faster than it really is. We measure the speed of these galaxies rotating, and we think they're too fast.. We measure the speed of other things in the cosmos, and they're all moving too fast... and we point to dark energy or dark matter as an explanation.. and all speed measurements are based on a time function, so if we have time dilation wrong and our clocks are slower than we think, then that would be a big problem.
When I started wondering about this, I figured that folks a lot smarter than I'll ever be would have already figured it out by looking at some standard speedometer here in our own galaxy and my thoughts were probably wrong. Imagine my surprise when I found out we haven't had any supernova in our galaxy for several hundred years.. long before any tech to measure anything. Which brought me to another point.. When I googled how often supernovas go off in an average galaxy, the number I got was at least 1+ per century.. and yet the last one in our galaxy was Kepler's in 1604. That's over 400 years. Once again, pointing to everything outside happening faster than at home. I understand that we might not see one going bang on the other side of the Milky Way, but there should have been five or six of them by now and it seems unreasonable to suggest they're all going off on the other side.
Comments? Anyone have any thoughts on this?
Astronomers use Type 1A supernovas to gauge distance because these type of supernovas are generally all the same brightness due to the way they happen (hence the moniker Standard Candle).. White dwarf sucks hydrogen from a binary, reaches a critical mass, and boom. The explosions of these supernova are generally all the same brightness so we can calculate the distance to them based on how dim they appear to be from our position.
My question: Do we have (for lack of a better term) a standard speedometer? Would it be reasonable to assume that the ejecta material from the Type 1A supernova would all travel at the same speed as well? Could we measure the rate of expansion of the ionized gas from a Type 1A supernova?
I was thinking that the density of the interstellar medium around such an explosion would have some affect on the speed of the ejecta material, but I'm not sure how much effect it would have.
Now the part you're going to think is silly and makes me a dumb dumb. I've been reading about dark energy, dark matter, and the general history of why we think these things exist. Been reading on this subject for over ten years.. It makes no sense to me that the universe is only ~5% visible matter and the rest is magical invisible stuff we can't see.. Applying the principles of Occam's Razor, the simplest explanation is usually the correct one.
Could we have time dilation wrong? We're observing the universe from a gravity well (Earth), which is inside a gravity well (Our Sun), which itself is inside a gravity well (Milky Way Galaxy).. I think the technical term for what I'm describing is "constructive interference". Time slows down when you're in a gravity well.. which means to the observer in the gravity well, everything outside looks like it's moving faster than it really is. We measure the speed of these galaxies rotating, and we think they're too fast.. We measure the speed of other things in the cosmos, and they're all moving too fast... and we point to dark energy or dark matter as an explanation.. and all speed measurements are based on a time function, so if we have time dilation wrong and our clocks are slower than we think, then that would be a big problem.
When I started wondering about this, I figured that folks a lot smarter than I'll ever be would have already figured it out by looking at some standard speedometer here in our own galaxy and my thoughts were probably wrong. Imagine my surprise when I found out we haven't had any supernova in our galaxy for several hundred years.. long before any tech to measure anything. Which brought me to another point.. When I googled how often supernovas go off in an average galaxy, the number I got was at least 1+ per century.. and yet the last one in our galaxy was Kepler's in 1604. That's over 400 years. Once again, pointing to everything outside happening faster than at home. I understand that we might not see one going bang on the other side of the Milky Way, but there should have been five or six of them by now and it seems unreasonable to suggest they're all going off on the other side.
Comments? Anyone have any thoughts on this?