- #1
cubud
- 29
- 0
I'm hoping someone can clear something up for me.
I was recently asked if someone traveling close to the speed of light toward a star would see that star's light as gamma rays. I argued that they would not due to their perception of time slowing down, whereas someone else argued that observing red shift in all stars moving away from us demonstrates that we would.
My impression as a complete layman is that we observe red shift in stars because space itself is expanding and therefore stretching out the wavelengths of the light, whereas we do not observe any difference in the speed of light as our perception of time alters as we travel through space close to the speed of light - and therefore we also do not observe a difference in the frequency of the light we observe traveling in the opposite direction.
It's left me somewhat confused, could someone tell me if I am wrong or not please, and if so then why I am wrong ?
Thanks!
I was recently asked if someone traveling close to the speed of light toward a star would see that star's light as gamma rays. I argued that they would not due to their perception of time slowing down, whereas someone else argued that observing red shift in all stars moving away from us demonstrates that we would.
My impression as a complete layman is that we observe red shift in stars because space itself is expanding and therefore stretching out the wavelengths of the light, whereas we do not observe any difference in the speed of light as our perception of time alters as we travel through space close to the speed of light - and therefore we also do not observe a difference in the frequency of the light we observe traveling in the opposite direction.
It's left me somewhat confused, could someone tell me if I am wrong or not please, and if so then why I am wrong ?
Thanks!