by alter-ego » Sat Aug 08, 2020 1:15 am
neufer wrote: ↑Tue Aug 04, 2020 2:12 pm
…
Would you mind telling us what your background on these matters is
Long story short, my background in these matters is not formal. I have a degree in physics, an obsessive analytical tendency, a long career in science and industrial R&D, and a lifetime of interest in astronomy including GR and Cosmology portioned with opportunity, experience, hard work and some luck. Then I joined this forum
where I often encounter challenging questions that I'm driven to answer, often turning into mini research projects.
Why did I pursue this project? I had a vision. A couple years ago, a redshift discussion prompted a desire to visualize of millions of objects expanding through space with their evolving redshifts over Gyrs of time. Objects with exaggerated brightness and color, changing in seconds that normally would take longer than the Universe is old. Realizing that vision led me to researching many papers, learning and practicing cosmoligical expansion and redshifts bit by bit. Two notable people,
Prof. Ned Wright of UCLA, and astrophysicist,
Dr. Tamara Davis, took time to look at, and comment on, my emailed questions. In my final summary package, Tamara said she had not seen a plot before with as much redshift verses time detail, and added she would not expect to see that kind of plot in many published papers. Cool!
So there's some background in a nutshell.
By the way, that plot provides me the visualization I wanted, but with a surprise. I expected to see all objects racing away from us with steadily increasing redshifts. That's not the case. Based on the present cosmological ΛCDM parameters for our accelerating universe,
- An observer today would see all objects with z < 2.3 speeding up (increasing redshifts) forever, while
- A few objects with z ≈ 2.3 have a redshift derivative, dz/dt, =0 showing a near-constant redshift for billions of years
- All objects with z >2.3 are decelerating relatively quickly (higher-z, faster deceleration) toward minima further into the future
→ Assuming a present redshift =50 ( emission time ≈ 50Myr), its minimum occurs about 11Gyrs from now at z = 23 (for the future observer)
→ For an past observer at the time acceleration begins to dominate (~7.3Gyr after the Big Bang), all objects would be slowing down
Mission accomplished.
[quote=neufer post_id=304845 time=1596550366 user_id=124483]
…
Would you mind telling us what your background on these matters is :?:
[/quote]
Long story short, my background in these matters is not formal. I have a degree in physics, an obsessive analytical tendency, a long career in science and industrial R&D, and a lifetime of interest in astronomy including GR and Cosmology portioned with opportunity, experience, hard work and some luck. Then I joined this forum :!: where I often encounter challenging questions that I'm driven to answer, often turning into mini research projects.
Why did I pursue this project? I had a vision. A couple years ago, a redshift discussion prompted a desire to visualize of millions of objects expanding through space with their evolving redshifts over Gyrs of time. Objects with exaggerated brightness and color, changing in seconds that normally would take longer than the Universe is old. Realizing that vision led me to researching many papers, learning and practicing cosmoligical expansion and redshifts bit by bit. Two notable people, [url=http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/CosmoCalc.html]Prof. Ned Wright[/url] of UCLA, and astrophysicist, [url=https://arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/0310808.pdf] Dr. Tamara Davis[/url], took time to look at, and comment on, my emailed questions. In my final summary package, Tamara said she had not seen a plot before with as much redshift verses time detail, and added she would not expect to see that kind of plot in many published papers. Cool!
So there's some background in a nutshell.
By the way, that plot provides me the visualization I wanted, but with a surprise. I expected to see all objects racing away from us with steadily increasing redshifts. That's not the case. Based on the present cosmological ΛCDM parameters for our accelerating universe,
[list]An observer today would see all objects with z < 2.3 speeding up (increasing redshifts) forever, while [/list]
[list]A few objects with z ≈ 2.3 have a redshift derivative, dz/dt, =0 showing a near-constant redshift for billions of years[/list]
[list]All objects with z >2.3 are decelerating relatively quickly (higher-z, faster deceleration) toward minima further into the future
→ Assuming a present redshift =50 ( emission time ≈ 50Myr), its minimum occurs about 11Gyrs from now at z = 23 (for the future observer)
→ For an past observer at the time acceleration begins to dominate (~7.3Gyr after the Big Bang), [i]all[/i] objects would be slowing down[/list]
Mission accomplished.