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Devin-M
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- TL;DR Summary
- How would observers distinguish between doppler and gravitational redshift in a simulated universe?
Suppose we have a simulated universe in which the observable portion (a collection of galaxies) is climbing out of a gravitational well at a very high fraction of the speed of light. The gravitational well is caused by a very large, accreting black hole outside of the observable portion. The observable portion is collapsing under its own self gravity so the galaxies move towards each other. Due to the collapse, observers would expect to see other galaxies blue shifted. However because the observable part climbs out of the gravitational well at very close to light speed with respect to the accreting black hole, the searchlight effect causes most emitted photons in the observable portion to move away from the black hole and climb out of the gravitational well causing redshift.
If the observers see galaxies that are moving toward them gravitationally redshifted in such a scenario, do they have any way to ascertain that the galaxies are coming towards them, despite the light they are observing from those galaxies being gravitationally redshifted?
If the observers see galaxies that are moving toward them gravitationally redshifted in such a scenario, do they have any way to ascertain that the galaxies are coming towards them, despite the light they are observing from those galaxies being gravitationally redshifted?