PSI Blog 20210712 Cause of the cosmological redshift
This week’s book prize goes
once again to Abhishek Chakravartty for another good question:
“In PSI Blog 20210614, you
have explained that when neither the medium in which the wave is travelling
changes nor the pressure within the medium in which the wave is travelling
increases, it is impossible for the velocity of the wave motion to increase although
in such cases, it is still possible for the wavelength of the wave to increase
due to other reasons. So in such cases, if the wavelength of the wave increases
due to other reasons, does it mean that the frequency of the wave decreases? I
am asking this question because velocity of wave motion is equal to wavelength
multiplied by frequency.”
[GB: The wave velocity is a
property of the medium and remains constant as long as the properties of the
medium remain constant. The frequency is given at the source and remains
constant. Thus, the change from water to air changes light velocity from
225Mm/s to 300Mm/s while the wavelength of light increases by 1/3. The frequency
remains the same.
The Imperfect Wave
Once again, because the
medium controls velocity and is constant and the source controls frequency and
is constant, the only thing left to change is the wavelength: the reason for
the cosmological redshift. The relationship you cite: velocity (cm/s) =
frequency (cycles/s) X wavelength (cm) is a mathematical idealization that
fails to consider entropic changes that must occur over time during wave
reproduction. In other words, no two waves can be perfectly identical per the Ninth Assumption of Science, relativism (All things
have characteristics that make them similar to all other things as well as
characteristics that make them dissimilar to all other things). Here, we are
treating a wave as a thing (a microcosm consisting of many particles).
A wave, then, is an
agglomeration of submicrocosms colliding with each other in response to some
impact that occurred within the medium they compose. To produce a second wave
form exactly like the first, those submicrocosms must collide in exactly the
same way as they did in the preceding wave. This is impossible, of course—there
are no identities in the Infinite Universe. Thus, all waves
are subject to “entropic changes” as mentioned above. Once formed by a
disturbance at the source, the constituents of each wave are subject to
divergence per the Second Law of Thermodynamics. It takes time for each of
those interparticle collisions to occur. That lag appears as an increase in
wavelength—a “redshift” if you will.
Unlike the usual “redshift”
produced by the doppler effect, this “entropic redshift” is not a result of
measurement due to source or observer motion. It is simply a function of
distance. With light, the effect is miniscule and only can be observed after
light has traveled cosmological distances. Remember that what is generally
considered the “cosmological redshift” also includes the doppler effect due to
the divergence and convergence of cosmological bodies. For nearby galaxies,
such as Andromeda, the motion toward us easily overwhelms the entropic
redshift, resulting in the well-known blueshift of Andromeda.
I am not too sure with regard to your last question about the possibility
that an entropic redshift could result in a decrease in frequency. You are
correct that the equation v=fλ (where v=velocity, f=frequency, λ=wavelength)
normally describes the situation. Therefore, we would expect entropic redshifts
to result in decreases in frequency. But frequency is produced at the source
and normally remains unchanged. As an example, I could paddle my boat at one
paddle per second. Once the wave produced by each paddle is underway, nothing
will change that 1 cycle/s frequency. The waves will diminish and disappear,
but they will never have an increase in frequency. Whether they could have a
decrease in frequency is problematic. I suppose that an entropic increase in
wavelength could be accompanied by an entropic decrease in frequency, thus
satisfying the above equation.]
1 comment:
alternative view:
No, the velocity of light is always SOL and fixed.
When encountering a change of medium the absorption and emission of the wave has changed. E.g. Lyndon Ashmore. Photon hits hydrogen ion in space. Absorbs and emits the photon BUT with frequency decreased slightly (wave length increased slightly)
An explanation for tired light. There are others.
George
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