- Posts: 612
- Thank you received: 138
Earths motion through the CMB
- JohnONeill
- Topic Author
- Offline
- Red Giant
Less
More
17 years 10 months ago #41271
by JohnONeill
Earths motion through the CMB was created by JohnONeill
Hi,
If there is no universal reference frame (according to Special Relativity)
how can we measure the motion of the earth relative to the Cosmic Background Radiation (CMB) which would seem to act as a universal frame of reference.
I put this question to Stephen Hawking at a lecture but he really did not answer my question.
Any ideas (is there something hidden in the "hard maths" of General Relativity?)
Anybody any ideas?
John
If there is no universal reference frame (according to Special Relativity)
how can we measure the motion of the earth relative to the Cosmic Background Radiation (CMB) which would seem to act as a universal frame of reference.
I put this question to Stephen Hawking at a lecture but he really did not answer my question.
Any ideas (is there something hidden in the "hard maths" of General Relativity?)
Anybody any ideas?
John
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- pmgisme
- Offline
- Red Giant
Less
More
- Posts: 754
- Thank you received: 0
17 years 10 months ago #41272
by pmgisme
Replied by pmgisme on topic Re: Earths motion through the CMB
I am sure that the celebrated COBE satellite measured that Doppler Shift in 1984.
Must try and dig it out.
Peter.
Must try and dig it out.
Peter.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Jared Macphester
- Offline
- Proto Star
Less
More
- Posts: 78
- Thank you received: 0
17 years 10 months ago #41333
by Jared Macphester
Replied by Jared Macphester on topic Re: Earths motion through the CMB
I cant say that I really understand the full gist of your question and its for sure that I have no idea how to answer it anyway..... but as I have been floundering around this material myself just recently I want to add my X cent worth.
I am assuming your question has to do with this dipole anisotropy thing in the CMB map. If so from what I gather it has something to do with the choice of a 'local frame of reference'. The CMB + the galaxies (over a large enough volume) form a local frame and it against this frame that the redshift is measured - not against the CMB as such.
Are we on the same wavelength or is it a different question?
It is all rather "interesting".
JMP
I am assuming your question has to do with this dipole anisotropy thing in the CMB map. If so from what I gather it has something to do with the choice of a 'local frame of reference'. The CMB + the galaxies (over a large enough volume) form a local frame and it against this frame that the redshift is measured - not against the CMB as such.
Are we on the same wavelength or is it a different question?
It is all rather "interesting".
JMP
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- JohnONeill
- Topic Author
- Offline
- Red Giant
Less
More
- Posts: 612
- Thank you received: 138
17 years 10 months ago #41359
by JohnONeill
Replied by JohnONeill on topic Motion through the Cosmic Background
Hi,
You can read about the Cosmic Microwave Background here:
www.phy.duke.edu/~kolena/cmb.htm
Imagine if there was no dipole (of 370 km/sec) then the Earth would be stationary in this (apparently) Cosmic Frame of Reference! I don't known what Albert Einstein would thought have of this.
John
You can read about the Cosmic Microwave Background here:
www.phy.duke.edu/~kolena/cmb.htm
Imagine if there was no dipole (of 370 km/sec) then the Earth would be stationary in this (apparently) Cosmic Frame of Reference! I don't known what Albert Einstein would thought have of this.
John
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Son Goku
- Offline
- Proto Star
Less
More
- Posts: 36
- Thank you received: 0
17 years 10 months ago #41408
by Son Goku
Insert phrase said by somebody else.
Replied by Son Goku on topic Re: Earths motion through the CMB
The CMB is really just a collection of last scattering photons. One could Lorentz boost to the CMB frame, but the laws of physics would be the same as in any other frame.
Hence nothing singles out the CMB frame as anything special.
You can also calculate Earth's motion relative to Alpha Centauri, but it doesn't imply anything special about that star.
Hence nothing singles out the CMB frame as anything special.
You can also calculate Earth's motion relative to Alpha Centauri, but it doesn't imply anything special about that star.
Insert phrase said by somebody else.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Rice
- Offline
- Proto Star
Less
More
- Posts: 49
- Thank you received: 0
17 years 10 months ago #41563
by Rice
ULT
Replied by Rice on topic Re: Earths motion through the CMB
I think the original question was if GR states there is no URF by measuring our motion against the CMB are we not violating GR since CMF forms a URF.
I think there are two parts to the answer :
As Son Goku pointed out we can measure our shift against anything in the COMOS, we observe RED Shift usually and this implies the other objects are moving away from us and this is due to the expansion of the Universe. Also there is well known relationship between Red shift and distance so that the further away the object is the greater the degree of Shift and hence its relative velocity (to us). In fact extrapolating the distance vs. velocity relationship implies that the furthest we can see into the Universe are those objects whose velocity relative to us is approaching the speed of light.
But to continue on the second part of the answer: The CMB is the cooling afterglow of the Big Bang. It is expanding by being dragged along with the expansion of space (I think I read that the expansion is causing the cooling). So the CMB is moving relative to us anyway , and because of its continued expansion it wouldn't represent a UFR.
The dipole and small differences in its spatial distribution density are interesting and have all sorts of implications when considering things like Galactic groups, the Great Attractor and voids in the Universe.
I remember some years ago reading a book by one of the original gurus on CMB, he was also involved in the COBE project. Maybe some one can remember the title of the book?
Anyway I hope all of the above is correct.
I think there are two parts to the answer :
As Son Goku pointed out we can measure our shift against anything in the COMOS, we observe RED Shift usually and this implies the other objects are moving away from us and this is due to the expansion of the Universe. Also there is well known relationship between Red shift and distance so that the further away the object is the greater the degree of Shift and hence its relative velocity (to us). In fact extrapolating the distance vs. velocity relationship implies that the furthest we can see into the Universe are those objects whose velocity relative to us is approaching the speed of light.
But to continue on the second part of the answer: The CMB is the cooling afterglow of the Big Bang. It is expanding by being dragged along with the expansion of space (I think I read that the expansion is causing the cooling). So the CMB is moving relative to us anyway , and because of its continued expansion it wouldn't represent a UFR.
The dipole and small differences in its spatial distribution density are interesting and have all sorts of implications when considering things like Galactic groups, the Great Attractor and voids in the Universe.
I remember some years ago reading a book by one of the original gurus on CMB, he was also involved in the COBE project. Maybe some one can remember the title of the book?
Anyway I hope all of the above is correct.
ULT
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Time to create page: 0.126 seconds