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Tracer
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Is the average nonlocal speed of light the same for travel out from the Sun and travel back to the Sun over the distances the Voyagers are now located?
Tracer said:Is the average nonlocal speed of light the same for travel out from the Sun and travel back to the Sun over the distances the Voyagers are now located?
No, I believe it does change by its amount of energy lost or gained as it moves through the sun's gravitational field. I believe the amount of speed change should be equal to the difference in the value of the escape velocity at any distance from the Sun and the value of the escape velocity at either extreme of the EMR's motion away from ot back to the Sun.davenn said:Yes
Is there a reason why you think it wouldn't be ?
Nugatory said:On the other hand, there are things that hold true no matter how we make these arbitrary choices. For example, the out-and-back round-trip time for a light signal can be calculated from the readings on a single earthbound clock, no arbitrary choice required. Likewise, the amount by which the light will be blue-shifted or red-shifted is a fact unaffected by our choice of coordinates and simultaneity convention. Things like that are called "invariants" and generally have real physical significance.
phyzguy, of coarse a Doppler Effect doesn't change anything. It is just an indication that an EM source has either gained or lost energy during its travel from its source to an observer, or alternately the EM source has a non-zero motion relative to an observer.phyzguy said:The Doppler effect does not change the speed at which light travels. It only changes the frequency and wavelength of the EM wave.
Tracer said:phyzguy, of coarse a Doppler Effect doesn't change anything. It is just an indication that an EM source has either gained or lost energy during its travel from its source to an observer, or alternately the EM source has a non-zero motion relative to an observer.
At a distance of about 14 billion light years from an observer on the Earth, space is expanding due to Hubbel Expansion at the speed of c (2.99792458E08 meters/second. Since EM sources at that distance are entrained in that expanding space, they and any EM they emit also will move away from an Earth observer at the speed of c. Consequently, no EM from cosmic objects at or beyond 14 billion light years will be able to reach the Earth. Granted that those same objects can be seen on Earth if they transmitted some light before they reached the 14 BLY boundary. However, those objects will be seen where they were located many years ago.
However, even though no EM can be observed from objects at a distance of 14 BLY, the Speed of EM relative to the Earth emitted by those objects can be calculated as a function of the escape velocity at their location.
Tracer said:phyzguy, Look again at post #5 in this thread.
Light expresses its loss or gain of energy as a decrease or increase in frequency as it climbs out off or falls into a gravity field, not by changing its velocity.Tracer said:No, I believe it does change by its amount of energy lost or gained as it moves through the sun's gravitational field. I believe the amount of speed change should be equal to the difference in the value of the escape velocity at any distance from the Sun and the value of the escape velocity at either extreme of the EMR's motion away from ot back to the Sun.
First you would have to define what you mean by "initial relative speed with the Earth". It depends on the coordinates you use. There is no underlying truth of the matter.Tracer said:This thread had been moved to relativity discussions because I am now asking how the speed of light relative to the Earth is affected when the source of the light is at a distance where Hubbell space expansion is c or near c. I am not interested in what an observer on either the Earth or the distant object would measure the speed of light to be at their locations. Instead, what and how would an Earth observer determine (Calculate) the initial relative speed with the Earth of a pulse of light made on the distant object ?
jbriggs444 said:First you would have to define what you mean by "initial relative speed with the Earth". It depends on the coordinates you use. There is no underlying truth of the matter.
How are you measuring speed? Rate of change of distance, presumably, but do you mean angular diameter distance? Luminosity distance? Co-moving distance? Some other measure of your own devising? You'll get different answers depending which one you pick. As @jbriggs444 says, there isn't a unique answer to your question.Tracer said:define :"The Initial relative velocity with the earth" as the relative speed, determined by an Earth observer,
Try 10Mpc at minimum.Tracer said:Use a distance of 10.0 light years if you want a specific distance.
That depends on how you define velocity. There isn't a single unambiguous definition.Tracer said:Since the EM pulse transit time is affected by the expansion rate of space, it appears that the EM relative velocity with Earth will change as it moves toward the Earth.
Tracer said:define :"The Initial relative velocity with the earth" as the relative speed, determined by an Earth observer, at the time of creation of an EM pulse by a distant object . The object creating the EM pulse must be at a distance at which Hubbell space expansion is occurring.
Increase of distance of the two bodies on inflating universe per universal time can be more than c. However, it is not called as velocity or speed in TOR.Tracer said:Instead, what and how would an Earth observer determine (Calculate) the initial relative speed with the Earth of a pulse of light made on the distant object ?
It is also not a well-defined quantity without further stipulations on exactly how it is to be calculated. In particular, a foliation is needed to establish a definition of "universal time".sweet springs said:Increase of distance of the two bodies on inflating universe per universal time can be more than c. However, it is not called as velocity or speed in TOR.
Tracer said:how would an Earth observer determine (Calculate) the initial relative speed with the Earth of a pulse of light made on the distant object ?
The coordinate speed of light is not constrained for non inertial coordinates. It is only inertial coordinates which require that the coordinate speed of light be c.Tracer said:I would like to discuss in this forum, how the non-local (Your Coordinate ) speed of EM changes
phyzguy said:Think about what you are asking. An object 1 billion light years away emits a pulse of EM radiation. You are asking, what is the speed of this EM pulse according to an observer here on Earth. How could you possibly make such a measurement? How could the observer on Earth even know that the EM pulse was emitted?
Tracer said:Astronomers now use a type of super novae which have a known light emission pattern to determine their distance from the earth.
Tracer said:Obviously, an Earth observer will not know that a distant object has emitted a pulse of light until the pulse reaches the Earth and is observed there. There seems to be a method of calculating the relative speed of the light pulse with the Earth at the time the pulse was created. The method requires that the distance from the Earth to the pulse emitting object can be determined. Astronomers now use a type of super novae which have a known light emission pattern to determine their distance from the earth. This is accomplished by how much diminished the light intensity from the object has become over its travel to the Earth. If that distance is expressed in kilometers per mega parsec, then multiply that distance by an accepted value of Hubbells Constant to determine the expansion rate of space in kilometers per second relative to the earth. Finally subtract that relative velocity from the value of c (2.99782458E05 km/second) to determine the relative velocity of the pulse with the Earth at the distance of the object from the Earth at the time the pulse was created.
PeterDonis said:What they are determining is not the "ruler distance" that you are implicitly thinking, nor is it the coordinate distance. It is the "luminosity distance", i.e., the observed luminosity, compared with the (assumed known based on the light emission pattern) source luminosity, converted into distance units for convenience. The actual relationship between luminosity distance and ruler distance (or coordinate distance) depends on the expansion history of the universe; it is not something you can know independently.
Gravity and expansion are both curvature effects - if you're considering either of these you are necessarily considering a universe with non-zero curvature.Tracer said:Please consider a universe without curvature, at least to start...the expansion history ... gravitational...
Yes, but...If that is correct, couldn't an Earth observer attribute the entire Doppler shift of spectrographic lines to the motion of the distant source
The key word here is "attribute". Yes, if I choose to attribute all the Doppler shift to recession then I can calculate a coordinate velocity for distant galaxies. However, when I made that choice I was also choosing to use a particular coordinate system (one that happens to be very convenient for cosmologists on earth, which is why we use it) so the coordinate velocity that I come up with has no particular physical significance. Use different coordinates and we'd come up with a different coordinate velocity and not all the redshift would be attributed to expansion.and thereby determine the RV of expanding space with the earth?
Nugatory said:The key word here is "attribute". Yes, if I choose twilltribute all the Doppler shift to recession then I can calculate a coordinate velocity for distant galaxies. However, when I made that choice I was also choosing to use a particular coordinate system (one that happens to be very convenient for cosmologists on earth, which is why we use it) so the coordinate velocity that I come up with has no particular physical significance. Use different coordinates and we'd come up with a different coordinate velocity and not all the redshift would be attributed to expansion.
Tracer said:f gravitational fields are -conservative
PeterDonis said:They aren't in an expanding universe. More precisely, in an expanding universe, the concept of "gravitational field" is not well-defined.
The speed of light in an expanding universe is approximately 299,792,458 meters per second, which is the same as the speed of light in a non-expanding universe.
Yes, the speed of light is bidirectional in an expanding universe. This means that light travels at the same speed in both directions, regardless of the direction of expansion.
The expansion of the universe does not affect the speed of light. The speed of light remains constant, regardless of the expansion of the universe.
No, it is not possible for anything to travel faster than the speed of light in an expanding universe. This is a fundamental law of physics known as the speed of light barrier.
Understanding the speed of light in an expanding universe is important because it helps us understand the behavior of light and other forms of electromagnetic radiation in the vast and ever-changing universe. It also plays a crucial role in theories and models of the universe, such as the Big Bang theory and the expanding universe model.