In physics, causality, requires the cause of an event to be in the past light cone of the result and to be ultimately reducible to fundamental interactions. Similarly, a cause cannot have an effect outside its future light cone.
Macroscopic vs microscopic causality
Causality can be defined macroscopically, at the level of human
observers, or microscopically, for fundamental events at the atomic
level. The strong causality principle forbids information transfer faster than the speed of light; the weak causality principle
operates at the microscopic level and need not lead to information
transfer. Physical models can obey the weak principle without obeying
the strong version. In the algebraic formulation of quantum field theory,
microscopic causality is taken as an axiom, formulated technically but
equivalent to the idea that two measurements in different places at the
same time cannot affect each other.
Macroscopic causality
In classical physics, an effect cannot occur before its cause which is why solutions such as the advanced time solutions of the Liénard–Wiechert potential
are discarded as physically meaningless. In both Einstein's theories of
special and general relativity, causality means that an effect cannot
occur from a cause that is not in the back (past) light cone
of that event. Similarly, a cause cannot have an effect outside its
front (future) light cone. These restrictions are consistent with the
constraint that mass and energy that act as causal influences cannot travel faster than the speed of light and/or backwards in time.
Another requirement of causality is that cause and effect be mediated across space and time (requirement of contiguity).
This requirement has been very influential in the past, in the first
place as a result of direct observation of causal processes (like
pushing a cart), in the second place as a problematic aspect of Newton's
theory of gravitation (attraction of the earth by the sun by means of action at a distance) replacing mechanistic proposals like Descartes' vortex theory; in the third place as an incentive to develop dynamic field theories (e.g., Maxwell's electrodynamics and Einstein's general theory of relativity) restoring contiguity in the transmission of influences in a more successful way than in Descartes' theory.
Simultaneity
In modern physics, the notion of causality had to be clarified. The word simultaneous is observer-dependent in special relativity. The principle is relativity of simultaneity. Consequently, the relativistic principle of causality says that the cause must precede its effect according to all inertial observers. This is equivalent to the statement that the cause and its effect are separated by a timelike
interval, and the effect belongs to the future of its cause. If a
timelike interval separates the two events, this means that a signal
could be sent between them at less than the speed of light. On the other
hand, if signals could move faster than the speed of light, this would
violate causality because it would allow a signal to be sent across spacelike intervals, which means that at least to some inertial observers the signal would travel backward in time. For this reason, special relativity does not allow communication faster than the speed of light.
In the theory of general relativity,
the concept of causality is generalized in the most straightforward
way: the effect must belong to the future light cone of its cause, even
if the spacetime is curved. New subtleties must be taken into account when we investigate causality in quantum mechanics and relativistic quantum field theory in particular. In those two theories, causality is closely related to the principle of locality.
Bell's Theorem shows that conditions of "local causality" in experiments involving quantum entanglement result in non-classical correlations predicted by quantum mechanics.
Despite these subtleties, causality remains an important and
valid concept in physical theories. For example, the notion that events
can be ordered into causes and effects is necessary to prevent (or at
least outline) causality paradoxes such as the grandfather paradox,
which asks what happens if a time-traveler kills his own grandfather
before he ever meets the time-traveler's grandmother. See also Chronology protection conjecture.
Determinism (or, what causality is not)
The word causality in this context means that all effects must have specific physical causes due to fundamental interactions. Causality in this context is not associated with definitional principles such as Newton's second law. As such, in the context of causality, a force does not cause a mass to accelerate nor vice versa. Rather, Newton's second law can be derived from the conservation of momentum, which itself is a consequence of the spatial homogeneity of physical laws.
The empiricists' aversion to metaphysical explanations (like
Descartes' vortex theory) meant that scholastic arguments about what
caused phenomena were either rejected for being untestable or were just
ignored. The complaint that physics does not explain the cause of
phenomena has accordingly been dismissed as a problem that is
philosophical or metaphysical rather than empirical (e.g., Newton's "Hypotheses non fingo"). According to Ernst Mach the notion of force in Newton's second law was pleonastic,
tautological and superfluous and, as indicated above, is not considered
a consequence of any principle of causality. Indeed, it is possible to
consider the Newtonian equations of motion of the gravitational
interaction of two bodies,
as two coupled equations describing the positions and of the two bodies, without interpreting the right hand sides of these equations as forces;
the equations just describe a process of interaction, without any
necessity to interpret one body as the cause of the motion of the other,
and allow one to predict the states of the system at later (as well as
earlier) times.
The ordinary situations in which humans singled out some factors
in a physical interaction as being prior and therefore supplying the
"because" of the interaction were often ones in which humans decided to
bring about some state of affairs and directed their energies to
producing that state of affairs—a process that took time to establish
and left a new state of affairs that persisted beyond the time of
activity of the actor. It would be difficult and pointless, however, to
explain the motions of binary stars with respect to each other in that
way which, indeed, are time-reversible and agnostic to the arrow of time, but with such a direction of time established, the entire evolution system could then be completely determined.
The possibility of such a time-independent view is at the basis of the deductive-nomological (D-N) view of scientific explanation, considering an event to be explained if it can be subsumed under a scientific law.
In the D-N view, a physical state is considered to be explained if,
applying the (deterministic) law, it can be derived from given initial
conditions. (Such initial conditions could include the momenta and
distance from each other of binary stars at any given moment.) Such
'explanation by determinism' is sometimes referred to as causal determinism. A disadvantage of the D-N view is that causality and determinism are more or less identified. Thus, in classical physics, it was assumed that all events are caused by earlier ones according to the known laws of nature, culminating in Pierre-Simon Laplace's
claim that if the current state of the world were known with precision,
it could be computed for any time in the future or the past (see Laplace's demon). However, this is usually referred to as Laplace determinism (rather than 'Laplace causality') because it hinges on determinism in mathematical models as dealt with in the mathematical Cauchy problem.
Confusion between causality and determinism is particularly acute in quantum mechanics,
this theory being acausal in the sense that it is unable in many cases
to identify the causes of actually observed effects or to predict the
effects of identical causes, but arguably deterministic in some
interpretations (e.g. if the wave function is presumed not to actually collapse as in the many-worlds interpretation, or if its collapse is due to hidden variables, or simply redefining determinism as meaning that probabilities rather than specific effects are determined).
"Small variations of the initial condition of a nonlinear
dynamical system may produce large variations in the long term behavior
of the system."
This opens up the opportunity to understand a distributed causality.
A related way to interpret the butterfly effect is to see it as
highlighting the difference between the application of the notion of
causality in physics and a more general use of causality as represented by Mackie's INUS conditions.
In classical (Newtonian) physics, in general, only those conditions are
(explicitly) taken into account, that are both necessary and
sufficient. For instance, when a massive sphere is caused to roll down a
slope starting from a point of unstable equilibrium,
then its velocity is assumed to be caused by the force of gravity
accelerating it; the small push that was needed to set it into motion is
not explicitly dealt with as a cause. In order to be a physical cause
there must be a certain proportionality with the ensuing effect. A
distinction is drawn between triggering and causation of the ball's
motion.By the same token the butterfly can be seen as triggering a tornado,
its cause being assumed to be seated in the atmospherical energies
already present beforehand, rather than in the movements of a butterfly.
In causal set theory, causality takes an even more prominent place. The basis for this approach to quantum gravity is in a theorem by David Malament. This theorem states that the causal structure of a spacetime suffices to reconstruct its conformal class, so knowing the conformal factor and the causal structure is enough to know the spacetime. Based on this, Rafael Sorkin
proposed the idea of Causal Set Theory, which is a fundamentally
discrete approach to quantum gravity. The causal structure of the
spacetime is represented as a poset, while the conformal factor can be reconstructed by identifying each poset element with a unit volume.
Absorption lines in the visible spectrum of a supercluster of distant galaxies (right), as compared to absorption lines in the visible spectrum of the Sun (left). Arrows indicate redshift. Wavelength increases up towards the red and beyond (frequency decreases).
Three forms of redshift occur in astronomy and cosmology: Doppler redshifts due to the relative motions of radiation sources, gravitational redshift as radiation escapes from gravitational potentials, and cosmological redshifts caused by the universe expanding. The value of a redshift is often denoted by the letter z,
corresponding to the fractional change in wavelength (positive for
redshifts, negative for blueshifts), and by the wavelength ratio 1 + z
(which is greater than 1 for redshifts and less than 1 for blueshifts).
Automated astronomical redshift surveys are an important tool for
learning about the large-scale structure of the universe. Redshift and
blueshift can also be related to photon energy and, via Planck's law, to a corresponding blackbody temperature.
Other physical processes exist that can lead to a shift in the frequency of electromagnetic radiation, including scattering and optical effects; however, the resulting changes are distinguishable from (astronomical) redshift and are not generally referred to as such.
History
The history of the subject began in the 19th century, with the development of classical wave mechanics and the exploration of phenomena which are associated with the Doppler effect. The effect is named after the Austrian mathematician Christian Doppler, who offered the first known physical explanation for the phenomenon in 1842. In 1845, the hypothesis was tested and confirmed for sound waves by the Dutch scientist Christophorus Buys Ballot. Doppler correctly predicted that the phenomenon would apply to all waves and, in particular, suggested that the varying colors of stars could be attributed to their motion with respect to the Earth.
Unaware of Doppler's work, French physicist Hippolyte Fizeau suggested in 1848 that a shift in spectral lines from stars might be used to measure their motion relative to Earth. In 1850, François-Napoléon-Marie Moigno analysed both Doppler's and Fizeau's ideas in a publication read by both James Clerk Maxwell and William Huggins,
who initially stuck to the idea that the color of stars related to
their chemistry, however by 1868, Huggins was the first to determine the
velocity of a star moving away from the Earth by the analysis of
spectral shifts.
In 1871, optical redshift was confirmed when the phenomenon was observed in Fraunhofer lines, using solar rotation, about 0.1 Å in the red. In 1887, Hermann Carl Vogel and Julius Scheiner
discovered the "annual Doppler effect", the yearly change in the
Doppler shift of stars located near the ecliptic, due to the orbital
velocity of the Earth. In 1901, Aristarkh Belopolsky verified optical redshift in the laboratory using a system of rotating mirrors.
Beginning with observations in 1912, Vesto Slipher discovered that the Andromeda Galaxy had a blue shift, indicating that it was moving towards the Earth. Slipher first reported his measurement in the inaugural volume of the Lowell Observatory Bulletin. Three years later, he wrote a review in the journal Popular Astronomy. In it he stated that "the early discovery that the great Andromeda
spiral had the quite exceptional velocity of –300 km[/s] showed the
means then available, capable of investigating not only the spectra of
the spirals but their velocities as well." Slipher reported the velocities for 15 spiral nebulae spread across the entire celestial sphere, all but three having observable "positive" (that is recessional) velocities.
Until 1923 the nature of the nebulae was unclear. By that year Edwin Hubble had established that these were galaxies and worked out a procedure to measure distance based on the period-luminosity relation of variable Cepheids stars. This made it possible to test a prediction by Willem de Sitter
in 1917 that redshift would be correlated with distance. In 1929 Hubble
combined his distance estimates with redshift data from Slipher's
reports and measurements by Milton Humason to report an approximate relationship between the redshift and distance, a result now called Hubble's law.
Theories relating to the redshift-distance relation also evolved
during the 1920s. The solution to the equations of general relativity
described by de Sitter contained no matter, but in 1922 Alexander Friedmann derived dynamic solutions, now called the Friedmann equations, based on frictionless fluid models. Independently Georges Lemaître derived similar equations in 1927 and his analysis became widely known around the time of Hubble's key publication.
By early 1930 the combination of the redshift measurements and
theoretical models established a major breakthrough in the new science
of cosmology: the universe had a history and its expansion could be
investigated with physical models backed up with observational
astronomy.
When cosmological redshifts were first discovered, Fritz Zwicky proposed an effect known as tired light. However this model has largely been ruled out by timescale stretch observations in type Ia supernovae.
Arthur Eddington used the term "red shift" as early as 1923, which is the oldest example of the term reported by the Oxford English Dictionary.Willem de Sitter used the single-word version redshift in 1934.
In the 1960s the discovery of quasars,
which appear as very blue point sources and thus were initially thought
to be unusual stars, led to the idea that they were as bright as they
were because they were closer than their redshift data indicated. A
flurry of theoretical and observational work concluded that these
objects were very powerful but distant astronomical objects.
Physical origins
Redshifts are differences between two wavelength measurements and
wavelengths are a property of both the photons and the measuring
equipment. Thus redshifts characterise differences between two
measurement locations. These differences are commonly organised in three
groups, attributed to relative motion between the source and the
observer, to the expansion of the universe, and to gravity. The following sections explain these groups.
Doppler effect, yellow (c. 575 nm wavelength) ball appears greenish (blueshift to c. 565 nm wavelength) approaching observer, turns orange
(redshift to c. 585 nm wavelength) as it passes, and returns to yellow
when motion stops. To observe such a change in colour, the object would
have to be travelling at approximately 5,200 km/s, or about 32 times faster than the speed record for the fastest space probe.Redshift and blueshift
If a source of the light is moving away from an observer, then redshift (z > 0) occurs; if the source moves towards the observer, then blueshift (z < 0) occurs. This is true for all electromagnetic waves and is explained by the Doppler effect. Consequently, this type of redshift is called the Doppler redshift. If the source moves away from the observer with velocityv, which is much less than the speed of light (v ≪ c), the redshift is given by
where c is the speed of light (since ).
In the classical Doppler effect, the frequency of the source is not
modified, but the recessional motion causes the illusion of a lower
frequency.
A more complete treatment of the Doppler redshift requires
considering relativistic effects associated with motion of sources close
to the speed of light. A complete derivation of the effect can be found
in the article on the relativistic Doppler effect. In brief, objects moving close to the speed of light will experience deviations from the above formula due to the time dilation of special relativity which can be corrected for by introducing the Lorentz factorγ into the classical Doppler formula as follows (for motion solely in the line of sight):
Since the Lorentz factor is dependent only on the magnitude
of the velocity, this causes the redshift associated with the
relativistic correction to be independent of the orientation of the
source movement. In contrast, the classical part of the formula is
dependent on the projection of the movement of the source into the line-of-sight which yields different results for different orientations. If θ is the angle between the direction of relative motion and the direction of emission in the observer's frame (zero angle is directly away from the observer), the full form for the relativistic Doppler effect becomes:
and for motion solely in the line of sight (θ = 0°), this equation reduces to:
For the special case that the light is moving at right angle (θ = 90°) to the direction of relative motion in the observer's frame, the relativistic redshift is known as the transverse redshift, and a redshift:
is measured, even though the object is not moving away from the
observer. Even when the source is moving towards the observer, if there
is a transverse component to the motion then there is some speed at
which the dilation just cancels the expected blueshift and at higher
speed the approaching source will be redshifted.
The observations of increasing redshifts from more and more distant galaxies can be modelled assuming a homogeneous and isotropic universe combined with general relativity. This cosmological redshift can be written as a function of a, the time-dependent cosmic scale factor:
The scale factor is monotonically increasing as time passes. Thus z is positive, close to zero for local stars, and increasing for distant galaxies that appear redshifted.
Using a Friedmann–Robertson–Walker model of the expansion of the universe, redshift can be related to the age of an observed object, the so-called cosmic time–redshift relation. Denote a density ratio as Ω0:
with ρcrit the
critical density demarcating a universe that eventually crunches from
one that simply expands. This density is about three hydrogen atoms per
cubic meter of space. At large redshifts, 1 + z > Ω0−1, one finds:
where t is age of the object after the big bang, H0 is the present-day Hubble constant, and z is the redshift. For these large redshifts, the age of the universe, t(z), is small, meaning that the light was emitted when the universe was young.
The cosmological redshift is commonly attributed to
stretching of the wavelengths of photons due to the stretching of space.
This interpretation can be misleading.
As required by general relativity, the cosmological expansion of space has no effect on local physics. There is no term related to expansion in Maxwell's equations
that govern light propagation. The cosmological redshift can be
interpreted as an accumulation of infinitesimal Doppler shifts along the
trajectory of the light.
There are several websites for calculating various times and
distances from redshift, as the precise calculations require numerical
integrals for most values of the parameters.
Distinguishing between cosmological and local effects
The redshift of a galaxy includes both a component related to recessional velocity from expansion of the universe, and a component related to the peculiar motion of the galaxy with respect to its local universe. The redshift due to expansion of the universe depends upon the
recessional velocity in a fashion determined by the cosmological model
chosen to describe the expansion of the universe, which is very
different from how Doppler redshift depends upon local velocity. Describing the cosmological expansion origin of redshift, cosmologist Edward Robert Harrison
said, "Light leaves a galaxy, which is stationary in its local region
of space, and is eventually received by observers who are stationary in
their own local region of space. Between the galaxy and the observer,
light travels through vast regions of expanding space. As a result, all
wavelengths of the light are stretched by the expansion of space. It is
as simple as that..." Steven Weinberg clarified, "The increase of wavelength from emission to absorption of light does not depend on the rate of change of a(t) [the scale factor] at the times of emission or absorption, but on the increase of a(t) in the whole period from emission to absorption."
In the theory of general relativity,
there is time dilation within a gravitational well. Light emitted
within the well will appear to have fewer cycles per second when
measured outside of the well, due to differences in the two clocks. This is known as the gravitational redshift or Einstein shift. The theoretical derivation of this effect follows from the Schwarzschild solution of the Einstein equations which yields the following formula for redshift associated with a photon travelling in the gravitational field of an uncharged, nonrotating, spherically symmetric mass:
M is the mass of the object creating the gravitational field,
r is the radial coordinate of
the source (which is analogous to the classical distance from the center
of the object, but is actually a Schwarzschild coordinate), and
This gravitational redshift result can be derived from the assumptions of special relativity and the equivalence principle; the full theory of general relativity is not required.
Several important special-case formulae for redshift in certain
special spacetime geometries are summarised in the following table. In
all cases the magnitude of the shift (the value of z) is independent of the wavelength.
Using a telescope and a spectrometer,
the variation in intensity of star light with frequency can be
measured. The resulting spectrum can be compared to the spectrum from
hot gases expected in stars, such as hydrogen,
in a laboratory on Earth. As illustrated with the idealised spectrum in
the top-right, to determine the redshift, features in the two spectra
such as absorption lines, emission lines, or other variations in light intensity may be shifted.
Redshift (and blueshift) may be characterised by the relative
difference between the observed and emitted wavelengths (or frequency)
of an object. In astronomy, it is customary to refer to this change
using a dimensionless quantity called z. If λ represents wavelength and f represents frequency (note, λf = c where c is the speed of light), then z is defined by the equations:
Calculation of redshift,
Based on wavelength
Based on frequency
Doppler effect blueshifts (z < 0) are associated with objects approaching (moving closer to) the observer with the light shifting to greater energies. Conversely, Doppler effect redshifts (z > 0)
are associated with objects receding (moving away) from the observer
with the light shifting to lower energies. Likewise, gravitational
blueshifts are associated with light emitted from a source residing
within a weaker gravitational field as observed from within a stronger gravitational field, while gravitational redshifting implies the opposite conditions.
The redshift observed in astronomy can be measured because the emission and absorption spectra for atoms are distinctive and well known, calibrated from spectroscopic experiments in laboratories on Earth. When the redshifts of various absorption and emission lines from a single astronomical object are measured, z
is found to be remarkably constant. Although distant objects may be
slightly blurred and lines broadened, it is by no more than can be
explained by thermal or mechanical motion
of the source. For these reasons and others, the consensus among
astronomers is that the redshifts they observe are due to some
combination of the three established forms of Doppler-like redshifts.
Spectroscopy, as a measurement, is considerably more difficult than simple photometry, which measures the brightness of astronomical objects through certain filters. When photometric data is all that is available (for example, the Hubble Deep Field and the Hubble Ultra Deep Field), astronomers rely on a technique for measuring photometric redshifts. Due to the broad wavelength ranges in photometric filters and the
necessary assumptions about the nature of the spectrum at the
light-source, errors for these sorts of measurements can range up to δz = 0.5, and are much less reliable than spectroscopic determinations.
However, photometry does at least allow a qualitative
characterisation of a redshift. For example, if a Sun-like spectrum had a
redshift of z = 1, it would be brightest in the infrared (1000 nm) rather than at the blue-green (500 nm) color associated with the peak of its blackbody spectrum, and the light intensity will be reduced in the filter by a factor of four, (1 + z)2. Both the photon count rate and the photon energy are redshifted. (See K correction for more details on the photometric consequences of redshift.)
Determining the redshift of an object with spectroscopy requires
the wavelength of the emitted light in the rest frame of the source.
Astronomical applications rely on distinct spectral lines. Redshifts
cannot be calculated by looking at unidentified features whose
rest-frame frequency is unknown, or with a spectrum that is featureless
or white noise (random fluctuations in a spectrum). Thus gamma-ray bursts
themselves cannot be used for reliable redshift measurements, but
optical afterglow associated with the burst can be analysed for
redshifts.
Local observations
In nearby objects (within our Milky Way galaxy) observed redshifts are almost always related to the line-of-sight
velocities associated with the objects being observed. Observations of
such redshifts and blueshifts enable astronomers to measure velocities and parametrise the masses of the orbitingstars in spectroscopic binaries.
Similarly, small redshifts and blueshifts detected in the spectroscopic
measurements of individual stars are one way astronomers have been able
to diagnose and measure the presence and characteristics of planetary systems around other stars and have even made very detailed differential measurements of redshifts during planetary transits to determine precise orbital parameters. Some approaches are able to track the redshift variations in multiple objects at once.
Finely detailed measurements of redshifts are used in helioseismology to determine the precise movements of the photosphere of the Sun. Redshifts have also been used to make the first measurements of the rotation rates of planets, velocities of interstellar clouds, the rotation of galaxies, and the dynamics of accretion onto neutron stars and black holes which exhibit both Doppler and gravitational redshifts. The temperatures of various emitting and absorbing objects can be obtained by measuring Doppler broadening—effectively redshifts and blueshifts over a single emission or absorption line. By measuring the broadening and shifts of the 21-centimeter hydrogen line in different directions, astronomers have been able to measure the recessional velocities of interstellar gas, which in turn reveals the rotation curve of our Milky Way. Similar measurements have been performed on other galaxies, such as Andromeda.
Extragalactic observations
The most distant objects exhibit larger redshifts corresponding to the Hubble flow of the universe. The largest-observed redshift, corresponding to the greatest distance and furthest back in time, is that of the cosmic microwave background radiation; the numerical value of its redshift is about z = 1089 (z = 0 corresponds to present time), and it shows the state of the universe about 13.8 billion years ago, and 379,000 years after the initial moments of the Big Bang.
The luminous point-like cores of quasars were the first "high-redshift" (z > 0.1) objects discovered before the improvement of telescopes allowed for the discovery of other high-redshift galaxies.
For galaxies more distant than the Local Group and the nearby Virgo Cluster, but within a thousand megaparsecs or so, the redshift is approximately proportional to the galaxy's distance. This correlation was first observed by Edwin Hubble and has come to be known as Hubble's law. Vesto Slipher was the first to discover galactic redshifts, in about 1912, while Hubble correlated Slipher's measurements with distances he measured by other means to formulate his law. Because it is usually not known how luminous
objects are, measuring the redshift is easier than more direct distance
measurements, so redshift is sometimes in practice converted to a crude
distance measurement using Hubble's law.
Gravitational interactions of galaxies with each other and clusters cause a significant scatter in the normal plot of the Hubble diagram. The peculiar velocities associated with galaxies superimpose a rough trace of the mass of virialised objects in the universe. This effect leads to such phenomena as nearby galaxies (such as the Andromeda Galaxy) exhibiting blueshifts as we fall towards a common barycenter, and redshift maps of clusters showing a fingers of god effect due to the scatter of peculiar velocities in a roughly spherical distribution. These "redshift-space distortions" can be used as a cosmological probe
in their own right, providing information on how structure formed in the
universe, and how gravity behaves on large scales.
The Hubble law's linear relationship between distance and
redshift assumes that the rate of expansion of the universe is constant.
However, when the universe was much younger, the expansion rate, and
thus the Hubble "constant", was larger than it is today. For more
distant galaxies, then, whose light has been travelling to us for much
longer times, the approximation of constant expansion rate fails, and
the Hubble law becomes a non-linear integral relationship and dependent
on the history of the expansion rate since the emission of the light
from the galaxy in question. Observations of the redshift-distance
relationship can be used, then, to determine the expansion history of
the universe and thus the matter and energy content.
It was long believed that the expansion rate has been
continuously decreasing since the Big Bang, but observations beginning
in 1988 of the redshift-distance relationship using Type Ia supernovae have suggested that in comparatively recent times the expansion rate of the universe has begun to accelerate.
Comoving distance and lookback time
for the Planck 2018 cosmology parameters, from redshift 0 to 15, with
distance (blue solid line) on the left axis, and time (orange dashed
line) on the right. Note that the time that has passed (in billions of
years) from a given redshift until now is not the same as the distance
(in giga light years) light would have travelled from that redshift, due
to the expansion of the universe over the intervening period.
The most reliable redshifts are from spectroscopic data, and the highest-confirmed spectroscopic redshift of a galaxy is that of JADES-GS-z14-0 with a redshift of z = 14.32, corresponding to 290 million years after the Big Bang. The previous record was held by GN-z11, with a redshift of z = 11.1, corresponding to 400 million years after the Big Bang.
Slightly less reliable are Lyman-break redshifts, the highest of which is the lensed galaxy A1689-zD1 at a redshift z = 7.5 and the next highest being z = 7.0. The most distant-observed gamma-ray burst with a spectroscopic redshift measurement was GRB 090423, which had a redshift of z = 8.2. The most distant-known quasar, ULAS J1342+0928, is at z = 7.54. The highest-known redshift radio galaxy (TGSS1530) is at a redshift z = 5.72 and the highest-known redshift molecular material is the detection of
emission from the CO molecule from the quasar SDSS J1148+5251 at z = 6.42.
Extremely red objects (EROs) are astronomical sources
of radiation that radiate energy in the red and near infrared part of
the electromagnetic spectrum. These may be starburst galaxies that have a
high redshift accompanied by reddening from intervening dust, or they
could be highly redshifted elliptical galaxies with an older (and
therefore redder) stellar population. Objects that are even redder than EROs are termed hyper extremely red objects (HEROs).
In June 2015, astronomers reported evidence for Population III stars in the Cosmos Redshift 7galaxy at z = 6.60.
Such stars are likely to have existed in the very early universe (i.e.,
at high redshift), and may have started the production of chemical elements heavier than hydrogen that are needed for the later formation of planets and life as we know it.
Nonetheless, relic sources post far higher redshifts than even the furthest astronomical objects observed. The cosmic microwave background has a redshift of z = 1089, corresponding to an age of approximately 379,000 years after the Big Bang and a proper distance of more than 46 billion light-years. This redshift corresponds to a shift in average temperature from 3000 K down to 3 K. The yet-to-be-observed first light from the oldest Population III stars, not long after atoms first formed and the CMB ceased to be absorbed almost completely, may have redshifts in the range of 20 < z < 100. Other high-redshift events predicted by physics but not presently observable are the cosmic neutrino background from about two seconds after the Big Bang (and a redshift in excess of z > 1010) and the cosmic gravitational wave background emitted directly from inflation at a redshift in excess of z > 1025.
With advent of automated telescopes and improvements in spectroscopes,
a number of collaborations have been made to map the universe in
redshift space. By combining redshift with angular position data, a
redshift survey maps the 3D distribution of matter within a field of the
sky. These observations are used to measure properties of the large-scale structure of the universe. The Great Wall, a vast supercluster of galaxies over 500 million light-years wide, provides a dramatic example of a large-scale structure that redshift surveys can detect.
The first redshift survey was the CfA Redshift Survey, started in 1977 with the initial data collection completed in 1982. More recently, the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey
determined the large-scale structure of one section of the universe,
measuring redshifts for over 220,000 galaxies; data collection was
completed in 2002, and the final data set was released 30 June 2003. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) began collecting data in 1998 and published its eighteenth data release in 2023. SSDS has measured redshifts for galaxies as high as 0.8, and has recorded over 100,000 quasars at z = 3 and beyond. The DEEP2 Redshift Survey used the Keck telescopes with the "DEIMOS" spectrograph;
a follow-up to the pilot program DEEP1, DEEP2 was designed to measure
faint galaxies with redshifts 0.7 and above, and it recorded redshifts
of over 38,000 objects by its conclusion in 2013.
Effects from physical optics or radiative transfer
The interactions and phenomena summarised in the subjects of radiative transfer and physical optics
can result in shifts in the wavelength and frequency of electromagnetic
radiation. In such cases, the shifts correspond to a physical energy
transfer to matter or other photons rather than being by a
transformation between reference frames. Such shifts can be from such
physical phenomena as coherence effects or the scattering of electromagnetic radiation whether from chargedelementary particles, from particulates, or from fluctuations of the index of refraction in a dielectric medium as occurs in the radio phenomenon of radio whistlers. While such phenomena are sometimes referred to as "redshifts" and
"blueshifts", in astrophysics light–matter interactions that result in
energy shifts in the radiation field are generally referred to as
"reddening" rather than "redshifting" which, as a term, is normally
reserved for the effects discussed above.
In many circumstances scattering causes radiation to redden because entropy results in the predominance of many low-energy photons over few high-energy ones (while conserving total energy). Except possibly under carefully controlled conditions, scattering does
not produce the same relative change in wavelength across the whole
spectrum; that is, any calculated z is generally a function of wavelength. Furthermore, scattering from randommedia generally occurs at many angles, and z
is a function of the scattering angle. If multiple scattering occurs,
or the scattering particles have relative motion, then there is
generally distortion of spectral lines as well.
In interstellar astronomy, visible spectra can appear redder due to scattering processes in a phenomenon referred to as interstellar reddening—similarly Rayleigh scattering causes the atmospheric
reddening of the Sun seen in the sunrise or sunset and causes the rest
of the sky to have a blue colour. This phenomenon is distinct from
redshifting because the spectroscopic lines are not shifted to other wavelengths in reddened objects and there is an additional dimming and distortion associated with the phenomenon due to photons being scattered in and out of the line of sight.
The opposite of a redshift is a blueshift. A blueshift is any decrease in wavelength (increase in energy), with a corresponding increase in frequency, of an electromagnetic wave. In visible light, this shifts a color towards the blue end of the spectrum.
Doppler blueshift
Doppler redshift and blueshift
Doppler
blueshift is caused by movement of a source towards the observer. The
term applies to any decrease in wavelength and increase in frequency
caused by relative motion, even outside the visible spectrum. Only objects moving at near-relativistic speeds toward the observer are noticeably bluer to the naked eye, but the wavelength of any reflected or emitted photon or other particle is shortened in the direction of travel.
Doppler blueshift is used in astronomy to determine relative motion:
Components of a binary star system will be blueshifted when moving towards Earth
When observing spiral galaxies, the side spinning toward us will have a slight blueshift relative to the side spinning away from us (see Tully–Fisher relation).
Nearby stars such as Barnard's Star are moving toward us, resulting in a very small blueshift.
Doppler blueshift of distant objects with a high z can be subtracted from the much larger cosmological redshift to determine relative motion in the expanding universe.
Gravitational blueshift
Matter waves (protons, electrons, photons, etc.) falling into a gravity well become more energetic and undergo observer-independent blueshifting.
Unlike the relative Doppler blueshift, caused by movement of a
source towards the observer and thus dependent on the received angle of
the photon, gravitational blueshift is absolute and does not depend on the received angle of the photon:
Photons climbing out of a
gravitating object become less energetic. This loss of energy is known
as a "redshifting", as photons in the visible spectrum would appear more
red. Similarly, photons falling into a gravitational field become more
energetic and exhibit a blueshifting. ... Note that the magnitude of the
redshifting (blueshifting) effect is not a function of the emitted
angle or the received angle of the photon—it depends only on how far
radially the photon had to climb out of (fall into) the potential well.
There are far-away active galaxies that show a blueshift in their [O III] emission lines. One of the largest blueshifts is found in the narrow-line quasar, PG 1543+489, which has a relative velocity of −1150 km/s. These types of galaxies are called "blue outliers".
Cosmological blueshift
In a hypothetical universe undergoing a runaway Big Crunch
contraction, a cosmological blueshift would be observed, with galaxies
further away being increasingly blueshifted—the exact opposite of the
actually observed cosmological redshift in the present expanding universe.