wolram said:
Thanks Marcus, but now i can not under stand why this method can not measure the Hubble flow, surly some change is seen over several years.
you see it very clearly! indeed some change is to be expected!
the change is extremely gradual (I will explain why) and therefore, to detect it, one needs very precise instruments and one needs to measure redshifts over an extended period of time
matt.o would be the person to discuss this. I have seen just one article about it----proposing a programme of measurements over the course of several decades----perhaps half a century (I don't remember the exact numbers)
matt.o was talking about using improved spectrograph instruments to carry this out, so perhaps it could be done on a shorter time schedule
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the basic idea, I think, in case anyone else is reading this, is that the Hubble law is
v = H D
the recession speed is proportional to the distance.
so as time goes on, the distance increases, so the recession speed increases, so the REDSHIFT should increase
and this should be detectable.
Now measurements of redshifts have been made for many years, so there are records. One should be able to see an increasing trend----if only they were accurate enough out to enough decimal places.
To understand the slowness with which redshifts change, recall that the current rate of expansion is ONE PERCENT EVERY 140 MILLION YEARS.
So every 140 million years the distance D increases one percent---and the recession speed v is proportional so it increases by one percent----
or if you think of it as stretch during travel, the travel time increases by one percent, and the rate of stretch is fairly constant over periods of time like 100 million years, so the stretchout is greater
either way you picture it, there is a one percent increase in the quantity (1 + z)
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but if you can only watch over a period of 140 years, then you get a change of a MILLIONTH OF A PERCENT
this sounds borderline unmeasurable.
I may have made some errors so this may be numerically wrong but the idea that comes thru is that the change is very SLOW. it is expected to be there, and to eventually be measurable, but only with improved instruments
maybe Wallace will have something more definite to say, or matt.o will get back to us on this