helenwang413 said:
How to understand that the cosmic microwave background (CMB) can define a cosmological frame?
Cheers!
roughly on average it should look the same temperature in all directions.
if you are moving, then it will look hotter ("blue-er") in the direction ahead of you
and it will look colder ("redder") in the direction behind you.
the hotspot was already found some time ago----I think in the 1980s----by a microwave observatory carried to high altitude by a U2 airplane. they measured the temperature in all directions and they found that it was roughly A TENTH OF A PERCENT warmer in the direction towards the constellation Leo
that is called the CMB "dipole"
so the people with the converted U2 highaltitude "spy" aircraft were able to measure the dipole.
Later with satellite observatory people could measure it more accurately and also find more complicated splotchy variations in the temperature and make maps of the CMB. The splotchy maps they publish usually have the dipole variation already subtracted out---so you don't see it in the maps.
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now that is the basic picture and you may know all that and be asking something more complicated and sophisticated. What would your follow-up question be?
the doppler shift in temperature corresponds to our going roughly at the speed 350 km per second in the direction of Leo. So to calculate a REST FRAME we have to imagine something that is going 350 km per second RELATIVE TO US back in the opposite direction from Leo, to COMPENSATE. If we could be on that train then we would not see any dipole. Then the CMB would look roughly same temperature in all directions.
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Actually the comological rest frame idea is very old. It goes back to BEFORE PEOPLE SAW CMB.
The renowned Edwin Hubble himself saw it. As observed from earth, the Hubble Law has a dipole.
the Hubble law says recessionspeed is proportional to distance
v = Hd
but unless you compensate for Earth's motion, this is not true. the galaxies in the Leo direction are RECEDING MORE SLOWLY than the law says they should because we are "trying to catch up with them" by our own motion relative to the expansion of the universe
and the galaxies in the opposite-from-Leo direction are RECEDING MORE RAPIDLY than the law says because our own motion, relative to the universe, adds to the observed recession velocity.
So to get the Hubble law to work out perfectly one has to compensate and subtract off our velocity vector of 350 km per second.
It is just a small correction compared with most galaxy recession speed so it hardly matters.
Also I am writing from memory, and it might not be 350. It might be 370 or something. But I think it is in the range 350-370 or somewhere around there.
and I say "earth's" motion but really mean a complicated combination of the sun's motion plus a small contribution from the Earth's orbital motion around the sun (which changes thru the year). the main part of that 350 or 370 is the sun's motion relative to CMB, i.e the same as relative to the expansion of the universe.
Now Helen Wang, that is a nice question. Do you have a follow-up question? Does your saying HOW TO UNDERSTAND have a deeper curiosity attached to it?