tomBitonti
Hero
Thanks!Haven't read either of these, but here is a public version of the second one: Velocities of distant objects in General Relativity revisited
TomB
Thanks!Haven't read either of these, but here is a public version of the second one: Velocities of distant objects in General Relativity revisited
However, this is an unsatisfying answer.
What I have read is that local systems are affected, very slightly, and not in a way that result in continuous local expansion.
I don't buy it. A Doppler effect requires a change in frequency measured as the amount of time/space between waves (and relative velocities). Light doesn't have that. A single photon has a frequency when it's detected. There's no need for a follow-up photon, or the next crest of the wave, to determine how far apart they are, i.e. their wavelength. No time between waves means no Doppler effect. So I guess I'm in the "gravitational shift" family.So … this was an interesting read. (What parts that I followed.)
(It seems) there is a lot more nuance than is being presented here.
Can some more practiced in the field say if this paper is legitimate?
TomB
Pretty sure QM doesn't believe in anything. It being a theory and not an actual intelligent entity. On the other hand, several things would make infinitely more sense if QM were an actual intelligent entity actively messing with us...But then, I'm not practiced in the field. I'm just someone who doesn't believe in time. But then, neither does quantum mechanics.
More like "the furthest distance a signal could ever reach us". Since the cosmos expands faster than the speed of light, by the time the light has travelled a fraction of the distance, the space has already expanded and added to the distance.When we speak of observable universe, we usually refer to the farthest distance from which a signal could have reached us by now, which gives that 45 something billion years.