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Arbitrageur
By 1929 it became clear that the universe was expanding, and relativity was re-interpreted in accordance with new observations supporting the idea of a big bang, but to claim a relationship between big bang and relativity seems to ignore that relativity was originally written for a static universe without any big bang.
The only difference as I see it is that without relativity, the redshift would have been attributed to Doppler shift and not the metric expansion of space.
mbkennel
Yes, this is true, but had no general relativity been invented by 1929 (a definite possibility without Einstein) it's unlikely that the observations of the redshift (what was actually observed) trend would have led to both a notion of an expanding universe and a finite time period back as a initial condition as the leading hypothesis.
Arbitrageur
The only difference as I see it is that without relativity, the redshift would have been attributed to Doppler shift and not the metric expansion of space.
mbkennel
Yes, this is true, but had no general relativity been invented by 1929 (a definite possibility without Einstein) it's unlikely that the observations of the redshift (what was actually observed) trend would have led to both a notion of an expanding universe and a finite time period back as a initial condition as the leading hypothesis.
In fact redshifts were, initially, incorrectly attributed solely to Doppler shift. This still infers motion away, it just doesn't involve the metric expansion of space. But if you take motion away even if from Doppler shift, and extrapolate it back in time, wont you still end up with a similar conclusion? That things that are getting farther apart now were closer together yesterday, and so on?
KrzYma
actually you can explain the red shift however you want. Gravity, velocity, metric expansion, light decay...
this is all just calculus, nobody actually ever measured the distance anywhere important.
What you're suggesting wouldn't match observation in many ways. For one thing, the observed redshift is a straight line for most distances, which is why they call it the "Hubble constant". There is some variance from this line at extremely long distances I think due to dark energy, but at most other distances it's fairly constant, so it would have to be measurable at the distances you're talking about to fit the observations.
KrzYma
what if light does decay ? not measurable enough for the first 100 million years ?
we could never detect this decay here on Earth, so we postulate light has a constant speed and a wave never change in frequency.
KrzYma
reply to post by Arbitrageur
I don't want to create a new theory, I just want to know exactly why this actual theory is wrong.
Once again:
Einstein's equations lead the scientists to develop Big Bang theory.
This one is needed for the gravitational field, gravity transforms this potential energy produced by the Big Bang into kinetic energy which is motion.
what if Big Bang never happened ??
where the energy for gravity comes from?