Speed of light vs universe expansion

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the relationship between the speed of light and the expansion of the universe, exploring how light from distant objects may not reach us due to the universe's expansion. It touches on concepts of redshift, spacetime curvature, and the implications of these phenomena on our observations of the cosmos.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that light can appear to be moving away from us even if it is emitted towards us due to the expansion of the universe exceeding the speed of light.
  • One participant notes that dark spots in the night sky indicate regions from which light cannot reach us, attributing this to the universe's expansion and redshift effects.
  • Another participant questions the idea that light from the "edge of the universe" should reach us if it travels at the constant speed of light, suggesting a misunderstanding of how this applies in an expanding universe.
  • A response clarifies that in curved spacetime, the concept of light traveling at a constant speed must be rephrased, as light moves along local light cones, which can change due to the universe's expansion.
  • Further clarification is provided that while light travels at 'c' locally, the expansion of space can cause it to never reach us, as the distance between us and the light source increases faster than light can travel.
  • Another participant emphasizes that in flat spacetime, the speed of light is constant everywhere, while in curved spacetime, it is only locally constant, complicating the understanding of light's behavior over cosmic distances.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying levels of understanding and agreement regarding the implications of spacetime curvature and the expansion of the universe on the speed of light. There is no consensus on the interpretations of these concepts, and the discussion remains unresolved.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the complexity of spacetime curvature and the assumptions regarding the nature of light propagation in an expanding universe, which are not fully resolved in the discussion.

djsubtronic
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After reading a few threads about the speed of light and the expansion of the universe, I noted one a message which mentioned that even though light may be headed our way it can appear to be going away from us, if the universe were expanding faster than the speed of light.

How does that make sense though?
 
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Nature doesn't need to make sense to us...only to her!

Have you noted dark spots in the night sky? Those represent dark spots from which insufficient light can reach you. [So something prevents light from reaching us.]

That's a crude one liner...a better explanation results from the expansion of the universe which causes the energy of distant emitted light to be reduced via redshift...

At the Hubble radius, where we observe a 'Hubble sphere' surrounding us, the universe is expanding at 'c'...the speed of light...but that is not the usual measure of relative velocity...so it turns out that some light can actually reach us from beyond that distance. There is a limit: The standard cosmological model has accelerated expansion with a horizon of about 15 billion Light years; light from beyond can’t reach us.

For more, try reading about OLBER's paradox in Wikipedia.
 
Thanks for the reply. But what I was thinking, is that if the speed of light relative to anything is still at the constant of C, then if we suppose the "edge of the universe" (for the sake of example) is expanding away from as at C and light from that edge is traveling to us at C, shouldn't it still reach us, since C is always constant?
 
djsubtronic said:
shouldn't it still reach us, since C is always constant?

No, because "C is always constant" doesn't mean what you think it means in a curved spacetime. In flat spacetime the statement has an invariant meaning as it stands; but in curved spacetime, you have to rephrase it as "light always moves along the local light cones" (and similarly, objects with nonzero rest mass always move inside the local light cones).

In flat spacetime, the two forms of the statement are equivalent because the light cones at different events all "line up" with each other. But in curved spacetime, they don't; so what look like "differences in the speed of light" at different events are really differences in the way the light cones are pointing at different events.

In an expanding universe, "different events" can mean events at different times, not just different spatial locations. So a light beam emitted towards us by a distant galaxy might never reach us because the expansion of the universe keeps tilting the light cones away from us.
 
To put Peter's excellent explanation into English without "light cones", think of it this way ... if the space between us and an object were not expanding, then it wouldn't matter how fast it was moving away from us since light emitted from it STILL would move towards us at c and would reach us. But when it is emitted at c but the space between us and the photon keeps increasing, then the situation looks as though (well, IS as though) the photon is moving away from us. No speeding tickets are issues because neither we nor the photon are moving FTL, it's just that the distance between us is expanding FTL. It's VERY counter intuitive.
 
What's also inherent in the prior two explanations is that in flat spacetime the speed of light is 'c' all over the place, locally and distant; in curved spacetime, meaning in the presence of gravity, light travels at 'c' only locally...that is, in a small enough space around you that spacetime may be taken as flat...
 
Thanks for the replies guys. Think it makes sense now... kinda.
 

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