harry wrote:[snip]
http://www.newtonphysics.on.ca/HUBBLE/Hubble.html
A New Non-Doppler Redshift
Paul Marmet, Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics
National Research Council, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A 0R6
Updated from: Physics Essays, Vol. 1, No: 1, p. 24-32, 1988
Read the paper for further info.
This redshift appears indistinguishable from the Doppler shift except when resonant states are present in the scattering gas. It is also shown that the energy lost should be detectable mostly as low frequency radio waves. The proposed mechanism leads to results, which are consistent with many redshifts reported in astrophysical data.
[snip]
Big Bang Cosmology Meets an Astronomical Death
By Paul Marmet (1932-2005)
http://www.newtonphysics.on.ca/BIGBANG/Bigbang.html
More and more astronomical evidence shows the weaknesses of the theory stating that the universe started with a Big Bang. A Canadian Astrophysicist presents this evidence and explains how the cosmic redshift is caused by gaseous matter in space.
[snip]
Discovery of H2, in Space
Explains Dark Matter and Redshift
http://www.newtonphysics.on.ca/hydrogen/
The recent discovery of an enormous quantity of molecular hydrogen not only solves the problem of missing mass; it also solves the problem of the redshift, in a non-expanding unlimited universe. The Doppler interpretation of the redshift is a variation of the Creationist theory, since it claims that the universe was created from nothing, 15 billion years ago, with a sudden Big Bang. Since a much larger amount of molecular hydrogen than previously admitted has been observed in the universe, we can now see how this hydrogen is responsible for the redshift observed. That molecular hydrogen is responsible for the redshift which is erroneously believed to have a cosmological Doppler origin.
Exploding the Big Bang
David Pratt
The majority of astronomers and cosmologists subscribe to the big bang theory, and interpret the redshift to mean that all galaxies are flying apart at high speed and that the universe is expanding. A growing minority of scientists, however, maintains that the redshift is produced by other causes, and that the universe is not expanding. As astronomer Halton Arp remarks in Seeing Red: Redshifts, Cosmology and Academic Science, "one side must be completely and catastrophically wrong" [1].
Redshift
http://www.electric-cosmos.org/arp.htm
Arp discovered, by taking photographs through the big telescopes, that many pairs of quasars ("quasi-stellar objects") which have extremely high redshift z values (and are therefore thought to be receding from us very rapidly - and thus must be located at a great distance from us) are physically associated with galaxies that have low redshift and are known to be relatively close by. Arp has photographs of many pairs of high redshift quasars that are symmetrically located on either side of what he suggests are their parent, low redshift galaxies. These pairings occur much more often than the probabilities of random placement would allow. Mainstream astrophysicists try to explain away Arp's observations of connected galaxies and quasars as being "illusions" or "coincidences of apparent location". But, the large number of physically associated quasars and low red shift galaxies that he has photographed and cataloged defies that evasion. It simply happens too often
[snip]
http://redshift.vif.com/JournalFiles/V1 ... 0N1ANT.pdf
A Bang into nowhere. Written well.
http://www.science-frontiers.com/sf080/sf080a04.htm
More evidence for galactic "shells" or "something else"
Measurements of periodic red-shift bunching appeared in the literature at least as far back as 1977 in the work of W.G. Tifft. The implications of this phenomenon are apparently too terrible to contemplate, for astrophysicists have not taken up the challenge. They may be forced to take the phenomenon more seriously, because two new reports of redshift bunching have surfaced.
First, B. Guthrie and W, Napier, at Edinburgh's Royal Observatory, have checked Tifft's "bunching" claim using accurately known red shifts of some nearby galaxies. They found a periodicity of 37.5 kilometers/second -- no matter in which direction the galaxies lay.
(Gribbin, John; "'Bunched' Red Shifts Question Cosmology," New Scientist, p. 10, December 21/28, 1991.) The work of Guthrie and Napier is elaborated upon in the next item.
Sec ond, B. Koo and R. Krone, at the University of Chicago, using optical red-shift measurements, discovered that, in one direction at least, "the clusters of galaxies, each containing hundreds of millions of stars, seemed to be concentrated in evenly spaced layers."
[snip]
http://www.ldolphin.org/tifftshift.html
On the Quantization of the Red-Shifted Light from Distant Galaxies
by Mark Stewart
One of the first indications that there might be a problem with this picture came in the early 1970's. William G. Tifft, University of Arizona noticed a curious and unexpected relationship between a galaxy's morphological classification (Hubble type), brightness, and red shift. The galaxies in the Coma Cluster, for example, seemed to arrange themselves along sloping bands in a redshift v.s. brightness diagram. Moreover, the spirals tended to have higher redshifts than elliptical galaxies. Clusters other than Coma exhibited the same strange relationships.
By far the most intriguing result of these initial studies was the suggestion that galaxy redshifts take on preferred or "quantized" values. First revealed in the Coma Cluster redshift vs. brightness diagram, it appeared as if redshifts were in some way analogous to the energy levels within atoms.
These discoveries led to the suspicion that a galaxy's redshift may not be related to its Hubble velocity alone. If the redshift is entirely or partially non-Doppler (that is, not due to cosmic expansion), then it could be an intrinsic property of a galaxy, as basic a characteristic as its mass or luminosity. If so, might it truly be quantized?
[snip]
There's quite a lot to cover here, but perhaps the easiest to address are the 'quantized redshifts' and 'intrinsic redshift' claims, by folk such as Arp and Tifft.
And perhaps the easiest way to handle these is simply to ask: "what, quantitatively, is the quantised/intrinsic redshift relationship being claimed?" Whatever the answer to this question is, based on data prior to the publication of 2dF or SDSS (DR5), then ask "to what extent does either 2dF or SDSS (DR5) confirm or rule out this/these relationships?"
If anyone reading this post wishes to claim that 2dF and/or SDSS (DR5) support the quantised/intrinsic redshift claims prior to these surveys, then please say so.
(If you are impatient, the Reader's Digest version is: none of the pre-2dF/SDSS claims can be validated/confirmed using these hugely richer, deeper, more consistent surveys).
Turning to the class of ideas of which Marmet's is but one: these all fail due to an inability to account for the rich set of observations, of many different kinds, which confirm the Hubble (redshift-distance) relationship,
independently of redshift measurements.
For example, there are several ways to estimate distance, independently of redshift: Cepheids, TRGB, TFR, SBR, fundamental-plane, SN 1a, SNII, and gravitational lensing. These methods yield consistent results (within the error bars). So a very big challenge for anyone claiming 'redshift is due to factors other than cosmological expansion' is why the consistency across so many methods.
More seriously, there is the 'un-explaining' or 're-explaining' that has to be done, if you are considering one of these 'non-cosmological' reasons for the observed redshifts.
If the only observational data we had was a few, meagre sets of lines in the spectra of point sources, such a 're-explanation' might not be so hard. However, the observational data is far richer than a few lines in the spectra of point sources - there are images (a 3D matrix of band/RA/Dec intensities), and spectra (integrated SED). Applying standard astrophysics to these rich datasets, one can get fully consistent interpretations in terms of stars, gas, and dust emission and absorption, where these interact in gravitationally bound systems (you also need to add accretion disks and jets, for AGN and QSOs).
Crudely, we could ask any of the 'alternative redshift mechanism' proponents: "what is it that gives rise to what we see {insert object name here}?" and "how far away is this object?" As far as I know (AFAIK), no such interpretations have been forthcoming.
So, harry, since you 'put this on the table', how about you tell us all what all these things are, that 'look like' distant galaxies (and quasars), in the dozens of big surveys of the last decade? Be prepared to back up your explanation with at least order-of-magnitude numbers.