Hubble's Law And A Question Of Time

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Hubble's Law incorporates the concept of "universe time" or "Friedmann time," which is essential for understanding the expansion of the universe. This law expresses the relationship between the rate of distance increase and the current distance of galaxies, emphasizing a "freeze-frame" perspective of distances at the present moment. The observed redshift does not directly correlate to the speed of galaxies but instead reflects the expansion of the universe during the light's travel time. As distances increase, the approximation of Hubble's Law becomes less straightforward, requiring careful modeling and data fitting. Overall, the discussion highlights the complexities of measuring cosmic distances and the implications for understanding the universe's expansion.
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One thing that really bothers me about Hubble's law is the question of time. Was this ever taken into account? When we observe large distances in space we are also looking way back in time. Sure Galaxies appear to be moving faster at a greater distance but how do we know how fast they are moving now when really we are just observing them further back in time the further away they are located?

If someone made a slow motion video of a bomb exploding and played it in reverse, sure the speed of particles moving away from the centre of the explosion would be faster the further back we played the video. How can we be certain that this is not what we are seeing when we observe distant Galxies and use these results to derive Hubble's law? It could be argued that a constant value for Hubble's constant is just another way of saying that matter under went constant deceleration after the Big Bang. If so it could easily predict the maximum size our Universe could achieve. How can we prove otherwise?
 
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Hubble law does indeed take account of time. The version of time it is based on is sometimes called "universe time" or "Friedmann time". It is the time that you see in the Friedmann equation which is what most cosmologists use to model the cosmos.

Universe time is implicit in the law, which says
v(t) = H(t) d(t).

suppose that t = present moment. Then it says if d(t) is the present distance (if you could freeze expansion and measure it today) and H(t) is the present value of the Hubble ratio, then v(t) is the rate that distance is increasing at the present moment and v = Hd.

The law is explicitly based on that kind of "freeze-frame" distance, which we can only estimate and know approximately by a process of modeling and fitting data. The mathematical meaning of the law, if you look at it rigorously, has things in it which are not directly measureable---that's just how it is. For galaxies not too far away the approximation is so close you can just apply it naively.

As you go further out you realize that the REDSHIFT does not correspond in any simple way to either the speed which the object had when it emitted the light, or to the speed which we infer that it has today. The redshift that you measure corresponds to in a simple precise way (not to any speed but rather) to the ratio by which the universe's distances expanded during the period of time the light was traveling to us.

In discussing Hubble law I am always using the "freeze frame" idea of distance. What you would measure (by radar or yardsticks or string, but really by light travel time) if you could freeze the expansion process at a certain moment in time. It is often called the "proper" distance by astronomers. The speed we are talking about is the instantaneous rate of increase of distances defined that way.

You might enjoy playing around with some of the online calculators that model the universe.
One I like is morgan's "cosmos calculator". I have the link in my sig at the end of the post.
You can also just google "cosmos calculator" and get it. When you get there first type in .27 for matter density, and .73 for cosmological constant or dark energy density, and 71 for the presentday value of Hubble parameter. Put in redshift 1000 if you want, and try other redshifts. It will tell you speeds (distance increase rates) both back then and now. It will tell you past values of Hubble ratio. It will tell you freeze-frame distances both back when the light was emitted, and now on the day the light is received by us. The nice thing about morgan's online calculator is it doesn't have a lot of extra frills. Just focuses on a few things without distraction. If you want other ones ask.
 
Many thanks for this excellent response Marcus and for the fabulous detail.
I find this subject intriguing - I think there is a lot of scope here for enhancing understanding of how the universe came about and much to discover.

Best Wishes,

Patrick Naughton


marcus said:
Hubble law does indeed take account of time. The version of time it is based on is sometimes called "universe time" or "Friedmann time". It is the time that you see in the Friedmann equation which is what most cosmologists use to model the cosmos.

Universe time is implicit in the law, which says
v(t) = H(t) d(t).

suppose that t = present moment. Then it says if d(t) is the present distance (if you could freeze expansion and measure it today) and H(t) is the present value of the Hubble ratio, then v(t) is the rate that distance is increasing at the present moment and v = Hd.

The law is explicitly based on that kind of "freeze-frame" distance, which we can only estimate and know approximately by a process of modeling and fitting data. The mathematical meaning of the law, if you look at it rigorously, has things in it which are not directly measureable---that's just how it is. For galaxies not too far away the approximation is so close you can just apply it naively.

As you go further out you realize that the REDSHIFT does not correspond in any simple way to either the speed which the object had when it emitted the light, or to the speed which we infer that it has today. The redshift that you measure corresponds to in a simple precise way (not to any speed but rather) to the ratio by which the universe's distances expanded during the period of time the light was traveling to us.

In discussing Hubble law I am always using the "freeze frame" idea of distance. What you would measure (by radar or yardsticks or string, but really by light travel time) if you could freeze the expansion process at a certain moment in time. It is often called the "proper" distance by astronomers. The speed we are talking about is the instantaneous rate of increase of distances defined that way.

You might enjoy playing around with some of the online calculators that model the universe.
One I like is morgan's "cosmos calculator". I have the link in my sig at the end of the post.
You can also just google "cosmos calculator" and get it. When you get there first type in .27 for matter density, and .73 for cosmological constant or dark energy density, and 71 for the presentday value of Hubble parameter. Put in redshift 1000 if you want, and try other redshifts. It will tell you speeds (distance increase rates) both back then and now. It will tell you past values of Hubble ratio. It will tell you freeze-frame distances both back when the light was emitted, and now on the day the light is received by us. The nice thing about morgan's online calculator is it doesn't have a lot of extra frills. Just focuses on a few things without distraction. If you want other ones ask.
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombination_(cosmology) Was a matter density right after the decoupling low enough to consider the vacuum as the actual vacuum, and not the medium through which the light propagates with the speed lower than ##({\epsilon_0\mu_0})^{-1/2}##? I'm asking this in context of the calculation of the observable universe radius, where the time integral of the inverse of the scale factor is multiplied by the constant speed of light ##c##.
The formal paper is here. The Rutgers University news has published a story about an image being closely examined at their New Brunswick campus. Here is an excerpt: Computer modeling of the gravitational lens by Keeton and Eid showed that the four visible foreground galaxies causing the gravitational bending couldn’t explain the details of the five-image pattern. Only with the addition of a large, invisible mass, in this case, a dark matter halo, could the model match the observations...
Hi, I’m pretty new to cosmology and I’m trying to get my head around the Big Bang and the potential infinite extent of the universe as a whole. There’s lots of misleading info out there but this forum and a few others have helped me and I just wanted to check I have the right idea. The Big Bang was the creation of space and time. At this instant t=0 space was infinite in size but the scale factor was zero. I’m picturing it (hopefully correctly) like an excel spreadsheet with infinite...
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