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-3 votes
1 answer
185 views

Somewhat silly special relativity and cosmology thought experiment [closed]

Edit: I have already tried to delete this several times. I have already posted that I would delete this if I could and it was deleted. I have three very legitimate masters degrees in physics and more ...
Steven Dorsher's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
79 views

Is the equation of state of the cosmological vacuum $P=-(1/3)\rho$?

I understand that the equation of state of the vacuum is assumed to be $P = -\rho$ due to the Lorentz invariance of its stress-energy tensor. But this argument assumes flat spacetime. We know at ...
John Eastmond's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
44 views

Expansion of the universe and superluminal speeds - an analogy

To illustrate, let's imagine the whole universe having a coordinate grid. Essentially a great big mesh grid of interlocking meter sticks. Now... Einstein's theory of relativity tells us that nothing ...
Woodenplank's user avatar
3 votes
3 answers
209 views

One-Way Speed of Light and the Big Bang

Variations on this question have been asked a few times (e.g. here, here, and a few YouTube videos here and here). The claim seems to be that because we can only measure the round-trip speed of light, ...
user218912's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
99 views

Why does the light intensity of stars distribute almost uniformly across the night sky, if earth is not special?

According to special relativity, the direction of light should change when a reference frame is moving at near-light speed. There was a question on stack exchange about this topic before: Light in ...
creaple's user avatar
  • 19
-6 votes
1 answer
97 views

What exists in the world according to the special relativity? [closed]

Before I learned about special relativity, I thought that only one 3-dimensional state of the world exists. Then, like in game of chess, in one "turn" previous state is destroyed - and the ...
Roman Nastenko's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
130 views

The twin paradox in a Finite Dark energy less universe

Let's imagine we have a universe that is finite and curves back on iself. So if you go far enough in one direction you end up back where you started. (e.g. 3-Sphere/3-torus) Then lets imagine that it ...
blademan9999's user avatar
  • 2,908
1 vote
0 answers
45 views

Does strongly gravitating object travel along geodesic of a background field? [closed]

That test particles travel along the geodesic is assumed in the context of GR. But does it apply to strongly gravitating object, such as black hole in an expanding universe, binary neutron star, etc.? ...
Bababeluma's user avatar
-6 votes
1 answer
113 views

Are cosmological Black Holes superluminal FTL phenomena? [closed]

What does it mean, "gravity is so strong that not even light can escape from a BH..."? This can physically interpreted IMHO that beyond the event horizon of the BH, light is phase ...
Markoul11's user avatar
  • 4,170
-5 votes
1 answer
117 views

Is it important to understand the concept of a universal 'now'? [closed]

Is it important to understand the concept of a universal 'now', to explain that time is a local phenomenon, and the rate of time varies throughout the universe, always dependent on the local ...
user161096's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
43 views

Could inhomogeneties and/or topological defects break the fundamental symmetries of the universe?

I have heard that some types of inhomogeneties and topological defects (like cosmic strings) in cosmology have been proposed to be able to break fundamental symmetries of nature such as the Poincaré, ...
vengaq's user avatar
  • 2,462
0 votes
2 answers
98 views

Mass matter, energy and "massless matter"

This is perhaps a rather silly question, or rather a matter of convention, but I would like to hear arguments about the appropriateness of certain definitions. Traditionally, in chemistry and in pre-...
Davius's user avatar
  • 1,640
2 votes
1 answer
46 views

How to include the effect of cosmological expansion in the close to speed of light calculations of a relativistic rocket?

I calculated time ago as undergraduated and post it at my blog the calculations for traveling through the Universe in a (special) relativist way. At what level and how should we include the effect of ...
riemannium's user avatar
  • 6,611
1 vote
1 answer
132 views

How to rule out that the speed of light was different in the past?

The constancy of the speed of light is a fundamental principle in modern physics, and it is supported by a wide range of current experimental evidence. There is no evidence to suggest that the speed ...
VVM's user avatar
  • 489
4 votes
3 answers
147 views

Why do free-falling particles converge onto the Hubble flow?

I'm currently reading the book Cosmology by Daniel Baumann, and in Chapter 2, I encountered a claim that I was unable to prove. To provide some context to my question, let's start with the expression ...
Wild Feather's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
134 views

Distance in Hubble law vs special relativity

Came across this very informative website https://astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmo_02.htm , and it has the following two diagrams. I'm having trouble figuring out why "But the Hubble law distance $D_{...
ABC's user avatar
  • 161
1 vote
1 answer
129 views

What is the average recessional velocity of an object in the universe?

I’m trying to get a better grasp on cosmological horizons and have a question regarding recessional velocity. In particular: What is the average recessional velocity of a cosmological object (...
Master Drifter's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
172 views

Twin paradox with black hole (based on Interstellar) [closed]

I'm an Undergrad student working on a summer project. I'm learning about Differential Geometry, Schwarzschild's Solution, General and Special Relativity. I want to include the twin paradox as well. In ...
John Mayer's user avatar
1 vote
4 answers
326 views

Do objects outside the Hubble sphere violate special relativity?

According to special relativity, objects can move with speed at most c. However, objects outside the Hubble sphere recede from us faster than the speed of light. How can these be reconciled?
Riemann's user avatar
  • 1,440
20 votes
5 answers
3k views

Wouldn't the cosmic background radiation (CMB) produce drag and thus create a preferential inertial frame?

Because the CMB is everywhere and is isotropic, if an object would have a certain velocity, it could have a pressure differential produced by the CMB which would produce drag till it would stop with ...
bananenheld's user avatar
  • 2,035
4 votes
1 answer
765 views

Relativistic Doppler Effect: Intensity change

My physics prof. mentioned briefly, that in the framework of the relativistic Doppler effect, not only the frequency (alternatively, the wavelengh) changes when objects move with respect to each other ...
Fuzzy's user avatar
  • 157
1 vote
0 answers
60 views

Why is the age of the universe $=D/v$, despite that $v$ is not constant with time?

I am watching a series of lectures by the Noble prize laureate Brian Schmidt and Paul Francis and in this episode (at 4:20) they make the simple assumption that a galaxy receding from us due to the ...
NeStack's user avatar
  • 157
-1 votes
2 answers
193 views

Cosmic rest frame breaking Lorentz invariance

Is it surprising given that the existence of a preferred frame in the universe (from the cosmic microwave background), the cosmic rest frame, that there are no preferred observers? (Lorentz invariance ...
konstle's user avatar
  • 758
1 vote
1 answer
149 views

Is there a way to view Einstein's spacetime "from outside" to intuitively understand it?

Is there a way, in Einstein's relativity (special and general) to view spacetime from a point of view that sits "outside" of it, to intuitively understand it? We humans can only see 3 ...
Nuke's user avatar
  • 107
0 votes
1 answer
175 views

FLRW metric, universe expansion, and the energy-momentum relationship

This is a follow-up to a previous question of mine. I am getting myself confused by some basic things in cosmology, so I hope whoever reading this is patient. The Euclidean FLRW metric is given by $$ ...
Maximal Ideal's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
240 views

Question about momentum in the FLRW metric

I'm reading through Modern Cosmology by Dodelson and Schmidt 2nd edition, and I am wondering if anyone can comment more on the following part. In Section 2.2, we define the Euclidean FLRW metric by $...
Maximal Ideal's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
50 views

Does shape dynamics introduce a temporal order on events separated by a space-like interval such that their simultaneity is not relative?

I've read some popular books and articles that reference shape dynamics (e.g., The Singular Universe and the Reality of Time, https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/shape-dynamics/). I have also ...
bblohowiak's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
215 views

Why is it assumed that special relativity does not apply to a universe expanding faster than light?

An argument I hear repeatedly is the light-speed limit only applies where spacetime is flat, so faster-than-light speed is possible where spacetime is curved. Thus special relativity does not apply ...
garmichaels's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
35 views

The $c$ in Ricci scalar in the RW metrc

I was trying to find the Friedmann Equations from the EFE and I am confused about the "$c$" term coming from the Ricci scalar. I guess I am missing something simple, but I cannot find any ...
seVenVo1d's user avatar
  • 3,122
1 vote
2 answers
142 views

Why is special relativity not enough to explain the seemingly accelerating expansion of the universe?

I have only recently studied Special Relativity, and have yet to learn anything regarding General Relativity, so I may be asking this due to a lack of knowledge - please educate me. I just read about ...
bloop's user avatar
  • 297

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