Communications of the Byurakan Astrophysical Observatory | 2021

Unique definition of relative speed along the line of sight of a luminous object in a Riemannian space-time

 

Abstract


Using a way of separating the spectral shifts into infinitesimally displaced `relativeĀ“ spectral bins and sum over them, we overcome the ambiguity of the parallel transport of four-velocity, in order to give an unique definition of the so-called kinetic relative velocity of luminous source as measured along the observerā€™s line-of-sight in a generic pseudo-Riemannian space-time. The ubiquitous relationship between the spectral shift and the kinetic relative velocity is utterly distinct from a familiar global Doppler shift rule (Synge, 1960). Such a performance of having found a kinetic relative velocity of luminous source, without subjecting it to a parallel transport, manifests its virtue in particular case when adjacent observers are being in free fall and populated along the null geodesic, so that it is reduced to a global Doppler velocity as studied by Synge. We discuss the implications for the instructive case of spatially homogeneous and isotropic Robertson-Walker space-time, which leads to cosmological consequences that the resulting kinetic recession velocity of a galaxy is always subluminal even for large redshifts of order one or more, and thus, it does not violate the fundamental physical principle of causality.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.52526/25792776-2021.68.1-38
Language English
Journal Communications of the Byurakan Astrophysical Observatory

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