Speed of light effected by expansion of space?

In summary: the "faster than the speed of light" behavior of distances in general relativity can be explained by the way space is changing, rather than the speed of light being violated.
  • #36
Marcus wrote:"GR equates the gravitational field to the geometry. The gravitational field is nothing else but the geometry. "

Isn't it then more accurate to say the geometry or gravitational field is expanding rather than saying space is expanding?
I still see no reason in attributing an expansion of space when space is defined as having no substance. We commonly think of the elapsed stretch of time (not an interval of time) as increasing without attributing the increase to a physical process, do you think of space similarly?
 
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  • #37
rasp said:
Space has no characteristic that I am aware of. It doesn't "look" like anything to observers. It has no primary meaning but is defined only secondarily as distance in relationship to the objects it separates.
It has as much reality as the electromagnetic field. The shape of space determines the paths of objects within it. It's not quite so simple as the distance, then, but also includes the motions of objects.
 
  • #38
rasp said:
Isn't it then more accurate to say the geometry or gravitational field is expanding rather than saying space is expanding?
That doesn't make a whole lot of sense, though.

rasp said:
I still see no reason in attributing an expansion of space when space is defined as having no substance.
It does, though. See gravitational waves. It's not the same sort of substance as stuff you can pick up, but then lots of things we are now aware of fall into that category.

rasp said:
We commonly think of the elapsed stretch of time (not an interval of time) as increasing without attributing the increase to a physical process, do you think of space similarly?
Well, it sort of depends upon what you mean. The appearance of the passage of time is tightly wound up with the increase of entropy, and is rather difficult to explain clearly. Heck, I'm not even sure if it's clearly understood yet.
 
  • #39
marcus said:
And space is not a substance, neither is geometry a substance.

You might enjoy reading Rovelli's parable of the whale. I will see if I can find a link.
This links gets an early draft the whole book,
http://www.cpt.univ-mrs.fr/~rovelli/book.pdf
Look at section 1.1.3 "The physical meaning of general relativity," page 7.

And also more elaboration, with quotes from Einstein and others, in section 2.3.2 "The disappearance of spacetime". On pages 52 and 53.

Thanks, I particularly liked the classical definitions of space as either an "object" (Newtonian) or a relationship (Aristotle). And now I understand space as a dynamical entity, which may be better described as a gravitational field with a particular local strength and shape.

Can I prevail upon you for another 2+ questions? Let me know if I'm off base with questions for which I lack the proper prerequisite knowledge for this forum?

1. Is the "expansion of space" equally understandable as the "weakening" of the cosmological gravitational field?

2. We can imagine a constant speed, C = d/t , changing if we alter the relationship between a quanta of space and a quanta of time. In GR this seems to be happening with the "stretching" of space. Is it also proposed to be "happening" with the shrinking of time?
2a. What would be the difference in saying space is expanding vs "space-time" is expanding?
 
  • #40
rasp said:
1. Is the "expansion of space" equally understandable as the "weakening" of the cosmological gravitational field?
No, I don't think so. If you take the situation of de Sitter space, for instance, then the space-time geometry is actually independent of time, even though it's undergoing accelerated expansion. There certainly is no weakening of the field in that case.

rasp said:
2. We can imagine a constant speed, C = d/t , changing if we alter the relationship between a quanta of space and a quanta of time. In GR this seems to be happening with the "stretching" of space. Is it also proposed to be "happening" with the shrinking of time?
2a. What would be the difference in saying space is expanding vs "space-time" is expanding?
Well, first, space expanding makes sense, because we're talking about how space changes as a function of time. How would space-time change as a function of time? The prospect doesn't make any sense.

As for your previous question, I'm not quite sure what you're asking here. In General Relativity, the speed of light is always equal to c, as long as it's measured relative to the velocity of an observer at the location of the light beam. The only reason it might be something different if you're considering the speed of light far away is that subtracting speeds at different points in General Relativity is an invalid operation. Therefore any distant speed we talk about will be arbitrary.
 
  • #41
vin300 said:
:confused:
When you look at the geometry of space-time, there is no notion of change in that geometry. It's as if the entire history of the universe were laid out on a single sheet of paper. This isn't the way that we see time. We don't see the entire history laid out before us: we see moment by moment passing sequentially. And as such, we tend to think of space and time as being very different things: we think of our universe as expanding. But in terms of General Relativity, you might instead just say, "well, our universe has some space-time curvature of such and such character".
 
  • #42
Chalnoth said:
But it is perfectly possible to look at light (or even non-relativistic objects) traveling between far-away points at speeds that appear to exceed that of light.

and then
The only reason it might be something different if you're considering the speed of light far away is that subtracting speeds at different points in General Relativity is an invalid operation.

Are you saying 2 contradictory things here?

My question is very basic. Restated, I'm asking, Do the same physicists who envision a stretching of space also talk about a shrinking of time? And could that account for the appearance of light traveling at speeds greater than C between far away objects.
 
  • #43
rasp said:
Are you saying 2 contradictory things here?
No. I'm saying that relative speeds are only well-defined at a single point. That is, I can say how fast something is traveling past me in an unambiguous way. But I can't say how fast something is moving towards/away from me far away in an unambiguous way.

rasp said:
My question is very basic. Restated, I'm asking, Do the same physicists who envision a stretching of space also talk about a shrinking of time? And could that account for the appearance of light traveling at speeds greater than C between far away objects.
No, that doesn't make any sense to me.
 
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  • #44
Ack, space and time are indivisible, one does not exist without the other. Its pi and the radius of a circle. Space without time is meaningless. The Ricci metric clearly illustrates this point. imo.
 

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