miscellanyous said:
Out of curiosity, how does this frame compare with the motion of the earth?
the solar system is moving about 370 km/second with respect to CMB
in the direction of constellation Leo
so that means a frame which is at rest with respect to CMB would be moving 370 km/second past us in the opposite direction
you ask if the frame exists. yes. Astronomers use it all the time because they correct their data for the solar system's motion (removing the asymmetry caused by solar system motion)
they also have to correct for the Earth's orbital motion around the sun but that is only 30 km/second----less than ten percent of the overall solar system motion.
COBE measured the 370 figure very accurately. there is a paper from around 1993-1995 from the COBE team that gives this figure, and the directional coordinates. You could look it up at arxiv.org.
As I understand, there is a preferred frame of reference where the microwave background is isotropic and from this we conclude the expansion of the universe is also isotropic with respect to this frame. This privileged frame seems like trying to sneak Newton in the back door. Consider the privileged frame as belonging to one twin in the famous twins paradox of special relativity. When the twins are reunited, they will disagree on the how much time has elapsed and therefore disagree on the true age of the universe. So I am still unconvinced – it seems like special relativity must allow for a non-unique age for our universe.
I don't understand why you bring up Special relativity. General relativity trumps special. We are working in GR here.
Suppose one twin is at rest with respect to CMB, and the other twin farts around and goes this way and that. then the time on the first twin's watch is right---corresponds more close to universe time. and the time on the giddy twin who was gadding about is just wrong. it doesn't correspond to the age of the universe we mean when we talk about the age of the universe.
However I think everybody recognizes that for GEN REL REASONS there is still no PERFECT universal absolute time----only approximations to it. This is not because of one twin moving around (we can forget about him).
It is because one twin could be DEEPER IN A GRAVITY WELL than the other twin. So time would be going slower for him. One twin might be out in the very empty space between clusters of galaxies, and the other twin might be living in some massive galaxy in the heart of some massive cluster of galaxies.
Both of them could be at rest with respect to CMB, but their clocks would still not agree perfectly.
it is still convenient to talk as if there was a welldefined standard universe time measured by observers at rest, and ignore gravity differences in definition, so there is a bit of imprecision in how the standard time is defined----but who cares, there are much more important sources of uncertainty in the observation data themselves. the usual LCDM model, with its co-moving distance, and its standard time, gives an impressive fit and works remarkably well.