Cosmological Red Shift in a Perfectly Reflecting Box

In summary: If we establish radio stations at different points in space, then the waves will be travelling in all directions and the radiation from any one point will be redshifted.
  • #71
PeterDonis said:
It suffers a coordinate effect that many cosmologists misleadingly refer to as "redshift", but it suffers no actual effect at all unless it interacts with something.

To expand on "no actual effect at all": what seems "pretty clear" to me is that the only invariant thing you can say about the wave packet's propagation in the absence of interaction is that the wave vector is parallel transported along the null geodesic worldline of the light ray, and "parallel transport" along a geodesic translates to "unchanged".
Nevertheless there is the observable Hubble redshift, i.e., an electromagnetic wave emitted very long ago from a far-distant galaxy has a higher frequency at emission than at observation, and you have a redshift-distance relation making the Hubble Law. It's just the free-em-field solution of Maxwell's equations in a FLRW spacetime.
 
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  • #72
vanhees71 said:
But these are standing-wave solutions.
Yes, but their superposition does not need to be standing. You can have a wave packet moving to the right towards the wall and then reflecting from the wall to the left.
 
  • #73
vanhees71 said:
there is the observable Hubble redshift
From a far-distant galaxy that is comoving (and assuming we ourselves are comoving), if we observe the light, yes. But that effect is due to the difference in 4-velocities of the emitter and the receiver; it is not due to anything that "happens" to the light during transit, at least not in any invariant sense, since, as I noted, the light's wave vector is parallel transported along its null geodesic worldline, and "parallel transport" means "unchanged".
 
  • #74
I think it is not stressed enough in cosmology that "expanding space" is basically a coordinate dependent concept. Usually, cosmological coordinates are the most convenient, but covariance says that we can use any coordinated we like.

For this particular problem, Fermi Normal coordinates are (IMO) more convenient, at least to a good approximation. We use the usual approximation that we can write the metric in Fermi normal coordinates to second order knowing the curvature tensor. This is from memory, but I could probably find the relevant section in MTW if it became an issue. If we wanted to, in principle we could do a higher order analysis without the approximation, but this would make things a lost less straightforward and would get in the way of understanding the most significant physical effects. It's also something I don't want to do, so I'll leave it to anyone who may be interested.

Given this approximation of the metric. we can intuitively see that the major difference between the box in the FRLW spacetime vs the box in non-expanding Minkowskii space is the tidal forces that are present in the former.

Classically, this means that the photons measured frequency would depend where your measuring instrument is located. The center of the box will have a different expected frequency than the ends.

The effect will be minor for reasonably sized boxes though, we can calculate/estimae the magnitude of this shift knowing the size of the box. I haven't run any numbers, but I feel confident in saying that it can be considerd small. More to the point, we know that the effect must vanish in the limit as the box length becomes small, so that in the limit as the length approaches zero, there is no change in photon frequency with time. For a large box, it's less clear, and it depends on where we monitor the photon frequency. I suspect that the photon frequency measured in the center of the box would remain constant, while the photon frequency measured near the ends would vary slightly with time as the tidal forces, due to the changing curvature, change with time. Probably a more carfeful analysis would need to be done to confirm this,though.
 
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  • #75
PeterDonis said:
From a far-distant galaxy that is comoving (and assuming we ourselves are comoving), if we observe the light, yes. But that effect is due to the difference in 4-velocities of the emitter and the receiver; it is not due to anything that "happens" to the light during transit, at least not in any invariant sense, since, as I noted, the light's wave vector is parallel transported along its null geodesic worldline, and "parallel transport" means "unchanged".
We measure a frequency of the light from a far-distant galaxy. That's a local observable. We infer from the known spectra of the involved atoms (of course under the assumption of the cosmological principle that the physics is everywhere and at any time the same) that this frequency is red-shifted.

I don't know which 4-velocities you compare. The standard red-shift equation is ##1+z=a(t_{\text{obs}})/a(t_{\text{em}})##, i.e., the two frequencies by definition are defined to be measured by comoving observers (i.e., observers at rest wrt. the CMBR).
 
  • #76
vanhees71 said:
We measure a frequency of the light from a far-distant galaxy. That's a local observable.
Yes.

vanhees71 said:
We infer from the known spectra of the involved atoms (of course under the assumption of the cosmological principle that the physics is everywhere and at any time the same) that this frequency is red-shifted.
Yes. Or, to put it another way, we infer what the emitted wavelength was based on our knowledge of the spectra of atoms.

vanhees71 said:
I don't know which 4-velocities you compare.
The emitted wavelength (or frequency, if you prefer to view it that way) is the inner product of the emitter's 4-velocity and the light's wave vector. The received wavelength (or frequency) is the inner product of the receiver's 4-velocity and the light's wave vector. Since the light's wave vector is parallel transported along the light's null geodesic worldline, it doesn't change from emitter to receiver; so if the received frequency is different from the emitted frequency, it means the receiver's 4-velocity is different from the emitter's 4-velocity.

vanhees71 said:
The standard red-shift equation
Is derived from the 4-velocities of comoving observers, which in standard FRW coordinates are given by the coordinate vector field ##\partial / \partial t##.
 
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  • #77
The four-velocities of the usually assumed observers are ##(1,0,0,0)## in the usual coordinates. As you say, it's ##\partial_t##. It's just at different places, and the light has to travel from the one to the other, thereby undergoing the redshift due to the time-dependent scale factor, ##1+z=a(t_{\text{obs}})/a(t_{\text{em}})##.

The derivation in the "naive photon picture" is simple. For radial light-like geodesics you have (##c=1##)
$$\mathrm{d} t^2-a^2(t) \mathrm{d} \chi^2=0$$
From this you have
$$\chi_{\text{obs}}-\chi_{\text{em}}=\int_{t_{\text{em}}}^{t_{\text{obs}}} \mathrm{d} t'/a(t').$$
Now let ##T_{\text{em}}## and ##T_{\text{obs}}## be the periods of the light at the emission and observation point. Then
$$\chi_{\text{obs}}-\chi_{\text{em}}=\int_{t_{\text{em}}+T_{\text{em}}}^{t_{\text{obs}}+T_{\text{obs}}} \mathrm{d}t'/a(t').$$
Subtracting both equations gives
$$0=\int_{t_{\text{obs}}}^{t_{\text{obs}}+T_{\text{obs}}} \mathrm{d} t'/a(t')-\int_{t_{\text{em}}}^{t_{\text{em}}+T_{\text{em}}} \mathrm{d} t'/a(t') \simeq T_{\text{obs}}/a_{\text{obs}} - T_{\text{em}}/a_{\text{em}},$$
and thus
$$\omega_{\text{obs}} a_{\text{obs}}=\omega_{\text{em}} a_{\text{em}} \Rightarrow \; \omega_{\text{obs}} = \omega_{\text{em}} \frac{a_{\text{em}}}{a_{\text{obs}}}.$$
In terms of wave lenghts
$$\lambda_{\text{obs}}=\lambda_{\text{em}} \frac{a_{\text{obs}}}{a_{\text{em}}}.$$
Both observers are assumed to be at rest, i.e., at ##\chi_{\text{obs}}## and ##\chi_{\text{em}}## during the entire time the light needs to travel.
 
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  • #78
PeterDonis said:
From a far-distant galaxy that is comoving (and assuming we ourselves are comoving), if we observe the light, yes. But that effect is due to the difference in 4-velocities of the emitter and the receiver; it is not due to anything that "happens" to the light during transit, at least not in any invariant sense, since, as I noted, the light's wave vector is parallel transported along its null geodesic worldline, and "parallel transport" means "unchanged".
Isn't it the point that the question what "happens" to light during transit is in the same sense meaningless as the question to the properties of a particle before measurement?
 
  • #79
pervect said:
Classically, this means that the photons measured frequency would depend where your measuring instrument is located. The center of the box will have a different expected frequency than the ends.

The effect will be minor for reasonably sized boxes though, we can calculate/estimae the magnitude of this shift knowing the size of the box. I haven't run any numbers, but I feel confident in saying that it can be considerd small. More to the point, we know that the effect must vanish in the limit as the box length becomes small, so that in the limit as the length approaches zero, there is no change in photon frequency with time. For a large box, it's less clear, and it depends on where we monitor the photon frequency. I suspect that the photon frequency measured in the center of the box would remain constant, while the photon frequency measured near the ends would vary slightly with time as the tidal forces, due to the changing curvature, change with time. Probably a more carfeful analysis would need to be done to confirm this,though.
Let's say the photon travels from one side of the box to the other side. During it's traveling measurements would reveal decreasing frequency corresponding to the increasing scale factor. Why do you distinguish the "center" from "near the ends"?

Do you say the tidal forces in curved spacetime offer another possibility to describe the frequency shift of the traveling photon?
 
  • #80
timmdeeg said:
Let's say the photon travels from one side of the box to the other side. During it's traveling measurements would reveal decreasing frequency corresponding to the increasing scale factor. Why do you distinguish the "center" from "near the ends"?

Do you say the tidal forces in curved spacetime offer another possibility to describe the frequency shift of the traveling photon?
Any light, anywhere, in SR or GR only has a frequency only in relation to a particular measuring device or observer. Any light can be measured at any frequency. What distinguishes two light pulses at a given location is which observers measure which frequency.

One statement, which is rigorously true for any assumptions about the box, is that an observer whose 4 velocity is given by parallel transport of the 4velocity of the box side of last reflection along the light path (world line) after reflection, will measure the same frequency as that box side would measure for the reflected light.

This is true wether the box is considered bound or with free floating walls, and is actually independent of the spacetime. It is true for an arbitrary GR solution in all cases. Thus any change in measured frequency along the light path may be considered as due to nothing more than a state of motion of the observer being different from the the parallel transport of the emitter 4 velocity along the light path.
 
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  • #81
timmdeeg said:
Let's say the photon travels from one side of the box to the other side. During it's traveling measurements would reveal decreasing frequency corresponding to the increasing scale factor. Why do you distinguish the "center" from "near the ends"?

Do you say the tidal forces in curved spacetime offer another possibility to describe the frequency shift of the traveling photon?

I do have to agree that if the tidal forces were changing rapidly enough, one would get a very very small drift in what we're calling the "photon frequency" (though it's a classical calculation).
 
  • #82
timmdeeg said:
During it's traveling measurements by comoving observers, who will not be at rest relative to the box (they wil be moving outward towards the box walls), would reveal decreasing frequency corresponding to the increasing scale factor.
See my bolded insert above; it is the critical piece that you left out, and which, when left out, makes your claim false instead of true.
 
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  • #83
PeterDonis said:
See my bolded insert above; it is the critical piece that you left out, and which, when left out, makes your claim false instead of true.
I think I am missing something and coming to an odd conclusion. Prelude: we pretend that the the box and any instruments have no contributions to the stress energy tensor and that the perfect fluid assumed universally present in an FLRW solution (except for the Milne special case) is present throughout the box, and thus the total geometry is the FLRW geometry.

Assume the center of the box follows a comoving world line. Assume the walls of the box maintain fixed Fermi-Normal distance from the central world line (formalization of the box being a bound system). Now, the congruence of comoving observers includes the central world line, but otherwise moves isotropically away from the central world line towards the sides of the box. Then, when a signal is reflected by the box wall, at some frequency per the box wall, wouldn't it be seen as blue shifted by comoving observers before reaching the box center, then not shifted, then red shifted? (Symmetry argument suggests this would be true irrespective of curvature: how could center choose which wall not to match in an isotropic geometry?)

[edit: Now I think there is nothing odd about this, it is simply true. The comoving congruence will see decreasing frequency over the traversal, it just starts out blue shifted relative to the wall observer]
 
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  • #84
PAllen said:
when a signal is reflected by the box wall, at some frequency per the box wall, wouldn't it be seen as blue shifted by comoving observers before reaching the box center, then not shifted, then red shifted?
I think this is correct, yes. Right after the reflection, the frequency according to the box wall will be higher than the frequency according to a comoving observer co-located with the box wall at that event. Comoving observers inside the box observing the reflected signal as it traverses the box will see the shifts you describe relative to the frequency according to the box wall; but they will all see redshifts relative to the frequency according to the comoving observer co-located with the box wall at the reflection event.

However, that raises another question. Consider that comoving observer who is co-located with the box wall at the reflection event. According to that observer, the reflection event adds energy to the light pulse--i.e., the frequency the comoving observer observes just before the reflection event is lower than the frequency the comoving observer observers just after the reflection event. (For an observer moving with the box wall, these two frequencies are the same.) Where does that added energy come from?
 
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  • #85
PeterDonis said:
However, that raises another question. Consider that comoving observer who is co-located with the box wall at the reflection event. According to that observer, the reflection event adds energy to the light pulse--i.e., the frequency the comoving observer observes just before the reflection event is lower than the frequency the comoving observer observers just after the reflection event. (For an observer moving with the box wall, these two frequencies are the same.) Where does that added energy come from?
Well, to answer that we need to back off from too many idealizations. Consider first the congruence of Fermi observers centered on the box average center. Then, when the light hits one wall, it transfers a little momentum to the box. Similarly on the other side. Due to finite speed of sound, the box will be expanding and contracting with some frequency lower than than the traversal time of the light (and shifting a tiny bit around the center, but that would be a much smaller effect due to relative speed light and sound). Then, the box is exchanging energy with the light such that the light loses some energy on each reflection, then gains it at each reflection, at some resonant frequency of the box.

Now, express this using the comoving congruence, and there is no longer a contradiction. The comoving observers are seeing exchange of energy between the box and the light from a different perspective, but it exists for both congruences.
 
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  • #86
PeterDonis said:
See my bolded insert above; it is the critical piece that you left out, and which, when left out, makes your claim false instead of true.
Yes I left it out, I implicitly presupposed it because otherwise the statement would't make sense.
Thanks for this hint.

I have been also assuming that the side of the box where the light was emitted is comoving all the time. But I see now it's much more meaningful to consider it's center comoving as @PAllen does.
 
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  • #87
PeterDonis said:
However, that raises another question. Consider that comoving observer who is co-located with the box wall at the reflection event. According to that observer, the reflection event adds energy to the light pulse--i.e., the frequency the comoving observer observes just before the reflection event is lower than the frequency the comoving observer observers just after the reflection event. (For an observer moving with the box wall, these two frequencies are the same.) Where does that added energy come from?
Wouldn't the comoving observer close to box wall interpret the increased energy of the light pulse after the reflection event as being due to the peculiar velocity of the wall towards him? This relative velocity doesn't change during reflection of the light pulse and hence the wall doesn't lose kinetic energy according to this observer because we think the box to be ideally glued.
In other words the added energy isn't created, it's due to the Doppler-effect.
Is this way of thinking too naive?
 
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  • #88
PeterDonis said:
See my bolded insert above; it is the critical piece that you left out, and which, when left out, makes your claim false instead of true.
In this case you have both the gravitational/cosmlogical redshift and a Doppler effect due to the motion of the observer relative to the CMBR frame. The frequency for a given observer is always given by ##u \cdot k##, where ##u## is the observer's four-velocity (normalized such that ##g_{\mu \nu} u^{\mu} u^{\nu}=1## in the west-coast sign convention).
 
  • #89
vanhees71 said:
In this case you have both the gravitational/cosmlogical redshift and a Doppler effect due to the motion of the observer relative to the CMBR frame.
This is true if you adopt standard FRW coordinates. But what you are calling "the CMBR frame" (by which you appear to mean standard FRW coordinates) is not what people usually think of as a "reference frame" since different comoving observers are not at rest relative to each other.
 
  • #90
J O Linton said:
Summary:: Does a photon in a box undergo cosmological red shift over time?

My question is this: suppose you put one or more photons into a box which has 100% perfectly reflecting walls. Will the photon(s) in the box experience a cosmological red shift over time or not? If so - why? and if not -why not?
Say the box has side lengths a,b and c. QM says energy states of photon are
[tex]E_{mnl}=\frac{\hbar^2}{4}\{\frac{m^2}{a^2}+\frac{n^2}{b^2} +\frac{l^2}{c^2}\}[/tex]
This holds for adiabatic change of a,b and c. Whether the box undertakes change of perimeters depends on the conditions of box we set. In the case that the box is the whole universe or its equiportional homogeneous part, CMB suggests that it holds.
 
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  • #91
PeterDonis said:
This is true if you adopt standard FRW coordinates. But what you are calling "the CMBR frame" (by which you appear to mean standard FRW coordinates) is not what people usually think of as a "reference frame" since different comoving observers are not at rest relative to each other.
I indeed mean standard FRW coordinates, and I consider an "observer at rest" wrt. the corresponding reference frame if there world line is given by ##(\chi,\vartheta,\varphi)=\text{const}##. Such an observer sees the CMBR as a homogeneous isotropic Planck spectrum, and that's what's usually called the rest frame of a thermal bath of photons.
 
  • #92
vanhees71 said:
I consider an "observer at rest" wrt. the corresponding reference frame if there world line is given by ##(\chi,\vartheta,\varphi)=\text{const}##.
And this usage of "at rest" is different from the usual meaning of that term, since comoving observers "at rest" by this definition are not at rest relative to each other; they are moving apart. Which is why you can't just help yourself to this definition of "at rest" and not expect it to cause confusion. Particularly not in a discussion which is explicitly considering a box whose walls are at rest relative to each other (and which therefore cannot all be comoving).
 
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  • #93
PeterDonis said:
And this usage of "at rest" is different from the usual meaning of that term, since comoving observers "at rest" by this definition are not at rest relative to each other; they are moving apart.

They become apart but we may say they keep rest in the sense that each of them observe all the bodies in inertial motion around them keep losing speed, i.e. proper speed or momentum, i.e. proper momentum though they keep zero proper momentum and stay at rest at constant ##(\chi,\theta,\phi)##.

As an illustration of difficulty of "moving", let us see the north and south poles of an inflating sphere shell. They become apart on the 2D shell but how can we define their relative motion on the shell?
 
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  • #94
anuttarasammyak said:
They become apart on the 2D shell but how can we define their relative motion on the shell?
Why not just say their relative motion is given by the increase of their proper distance per proper time unit?
 
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  • #95
Sure, one has to clearly say what one means with "at rest". The definition I'm used to from our standard cosmology lecture (and which I considered the standard meaning in cosmlogy) where usually "at rest relative to each other" means the world lines defined by constant spatial standard FLRW coordinates (i.e., ##\chi## or ##r##, ##\vartheta##, ##\varphi##), i.e., the congruence of comoving "dust particles". It's clear that a "box" is bound by (dominantly em.) forces and thus the different parts of the box are not all co-moving.
 
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  • #96
timmdeeg said:
Why not just say their relative motion is given by the increase of their proper distance per proper time unit?
A distance, say ##l_0## increases to ##l## with time t is mentioned
[tex]l=\frac{a}{a_0} l_0 [/tex]
[tex]\frac{l-l_0}{t-t_0}=\frac{\frac{a}{a_0}-1}{t-t_0}l_0=[\dot{a}(t_0) + \frac{1}{2}\ddot{a}(t_0)(t-t_0)+...]\frac{l_0}{a_0}=V[/tex]
I named it V and it has dimension of ##LT^{-1}## but I hesitate to call it "velocity" or "motion".

As for red shift well described in #77,
[tex]\omega a = \omega_0 a_0[/tex]
[tex]\frac{\omega_0-\omega}{\omega_0}=1-\frac{a_0}{a}[/tex]
In interpretation that same effect comes from Doppler effect in IFR the recessional velocity v is
[tex]\frac{\omega_0-\omega}{\omega_0}=\frac{v}{c}[/tex]
Equating these two equatins
[tex]\frac{v}{c}=1-\frac{a_0}{a}=1-\frac{a_0}{a_0+\dot{a}(t_0) (t-t_0)+ \frac{1}{2}\ddot{a}(t_0)(t-t_0)^2+...}[/tex]

I think v is not real velocity which takes place but a parameter in interpretation "as if" it is due to Doppler effect in IFR. As an example, in Doppler effect in IFR v is velocity of emitter wrt receiver at the time of emission ##t=t_0##, however, I cannot read in the above equation for what time v is defined.
 
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  • #97
anuttarasammyak said:
I think v is not real velocity which takes place but a parameter in interpretation "as if" it is due to Doppler effect in IFR. As an example, Doppler effect in IFR, v is velocity of emitter at the time of emission ##t=t_0##, however, I cannot read when v is defined in the above equation.
One can argue with the special relativistic Doppler formula, as Bunn & Hogg do in this paper, equation (6):

https://arxiv.org/pdf/0808.1081.pdf
Equation (6) can be derived by a straightforward calculation using the rules for parallel transport, but the derivation is easier if we recast the statement in more physical terms ...
 
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  • #98
In the paper, the accumulation of many infinitesimal Doppler shifts, is a good alternative idea to understand the red shifts. Thank you.
 
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  • #99
anuttarasammyak said:
They become apart but we may say they keep rest in the sense that each of them observe all the bodies in inertial motion around them keep losing speed, i.e. proper speed or momentum, i.e. proper momentum though they keep zero proper momentum and stay at rest at constant ##(\chi,\theta,\phi)##.
I have no idea what you mean by this.

anuttarasammyak said:
As an illustration of difficulty of "moving", let us see the north and south poles of an inflating sphere shell. They become apart on the 2D shell but how can we define their relative motion on the shell?
I have no idea what point you are trying to make here.
 
  • #100
vanhees71 said:
The definition I'm used to from our standard cosmology lecture (and which I considered the standard meaning in cosmlogy) where usually "at rest relative to each other" means the world lines defined by constant spatial standard FLRW coordinates
No, that is not what at rest relative to each other (my emphasis) means, even in cosmology. That's why I used that specific term, with the specific qualifier I just bolded; because that specific term means, specifically, at rest in the ordinary lay person's sense--the proper distance between the objects stays constant. If we wanted an explicit physical test for this, we would have the two objects exchange repeated round-trip light signals; they are at rest relative to each other if and only if the round-trip light travel time stays constant.

The obvious conflict between "at rest relative to each other" (which, as I just noted, matches the ordinary lay person's understanding of what "at rest" means) and "at rest in FRW coordinates" is why I do not think using the term "at rest" to mean "at rest in FRW coordinates" is a good idea. Particularly, as I said, in this thread, where the discussion is explicitly focused on a case where not all objects are comoving. The walls of the box are at rest relative to each other, even though they are not at rest in FRW coordinates.
 
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  • #101
timmdeeg said:
One can argue with the special relativistic Doppler formula, as Bunn & Hogg do in this paper, equation (6)
Equation (6) in the paper is the SR Doppler formula; the paper says so explicitly. Why do you think the paper is "arguing with" the SR Doppler formula?
 
  • #102
PeterDonis said:
Equation (6) in the paper is the SR Doppler formula; the paper says so explicitly. Why do you think the paper is "arguing with" the SR Doppler formula?
I definitely think @timmdeeg meant "with" in the sense of "using".
 
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  • #103
PAllen said:
I definitely think @timmdeeg meant "with" in the sense of "using".
Yes, indeed, thanks for assisting!
 
  • #104
PeterDonis said:
That's why I used that specific term, with the specific qualifier I just bolded; because that specific term means, specifically, at rest in the ordinary lay person's sense--the proper distance between the objects stays constant.
But I think a lay persons who understands the meaning of "the proper distance between the objects stays constant" refers this to flat Minkowski spacetime and not to the expanding universe. Regarding the latter he refers "at rest" relative to the CMB or relative to the isotropic universe. A lay person who doesn't have this very basic knowledge doesn't understand the meaning of "the proper distance between the objects stays constant" and doesn't even think about the meaning of "at rest".
 
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  • #105
timmdeeg said:
But I think a lay persons who understands the meaning of "the proper distance between the objects stays constant" refers this to flat Minkowski spacetime and not to the expanding universe.
I consider myself a layperson. I would most certainly understand the phrase "the proper distance between the objects stays constant" as an attempt to keep coordinates and even the geometry of an expanding universe out of it.

Though yes, one can see that outside of flat Minkowski spacetime, proper distance might become a fuzzier concept as the separation between two objects increases. Two sides of a small box maintained at a fixed proper separation in a large expanding universe would seem to qualify as adequately local so that the concept is not fuzzy enough to worry about.
 
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