Chris Peterson wrote:neufer wrote:
Then, pray tell, what causes Hubble redshift
if it is not the fundamental increase of the photon's wavelength?
Yes. What does that have to do with the fact that gravity overcomes cosmological expansion on a local scale?
Hubble expansion is generally insignificant over distances & times
that are small compared with the size & age of the universe.
But that does not mean that Hubble expansion doesn't exist on the scale
of even photons (as it must to explain the non-Doppler Hubble redshift).
Hubble expansion on the scale of the Earth Moon dynamic system (over decades) seems to be just measurable.
Chris Peterson wrote:neufer wrote:
And why is my calculation of the Hubble relative effect on the observed increase in the moon's orbit [2.8/3.8 ~ 73%]
so close to my calculation of the Hubble relative effect on the observed increase in the earth's day [5/6.9 ~ 73%]
[Hence, only about 27% is due to tidal coupling.]
I.e., where am I going wrong?
I'd say you're going wrong by making the assumption that any of the separation is related to cosmological expansion. The guys who play with the dimensions of the Pyramids can provide all sorts of amazing correlations, too! And why do you assume a linear relationship between the Moon's orbital radius and the length of the Earth's day?
The generally held assumption is that tidal effects are totally responsible for
the increase in both the Moon's orbital radius & the length of the Earth's day.
But Hubble expansion should
also affect both the Moon's orbital radius & the length of the Earth's day.
My back of the envelope calculations seem to indicate that Hubble expansion dominates both
while being qualitatively indistinguishable from tidal effects (over decadal time periods).
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Note that the increased tidal effects of the past would have placed
the moon very close to the Earth just two billion years ago.
The fact that current tidal force amounts to only 10 mm/yr expansion rather than 38 mm/yr expansion
would help explain why the moon was not so uncomfortably close to the Earth just two billion years ago.