Quantum Darwinism is a theory meant to explain the emergence of the classical world from the quantum world as due to a process of Darwiniannatural selection induced by the environment interacting with the quantum system; where the many possible quantum states are selected against in favor of a stable pointer state. It was proposed in 2003 by Wojciech Zurek and a group of collaborators including Ollivier, Poulin, Paz and Blume-Kohout. The development of the theory is due to the integration of a number of
Zurek's research topics pursued over the course of 25 years, including pointer states, einselection and decoherence.
A study in 2010 is claimed to provide preliminary supporting evidence of quantum Darwinism with scars of a quantum dot "becoming a family of mother-daughter states" indicating they could "stabilize into multiple pointer states"; additionally, a similar kind of scene has been suggested with perturbation-induced scarring in disordered quantum dots (see scars).
However, the claimed evidence is also subject to the circularity
criticism by Ruth Kastner (see Implications below). Basically, the de
facto phenomenon of decoherence that underlies the claims of Quantum
Darwinism may not really arise in a unitary-only dynamics. Thus, even if
there is decoherence, this does not show that macroscopic pointer
states naturally emerge without some form of collapse.
Description of the theory
Along with Zurek's related theory of envariance (invariance due to quantum entanglement), quantum Darwinism seeks to explain how the classical world emerges from the quantum world and proposes to answer the quantum measurement problem, the main interpretational challenge
for quantum theory. The measurement problem arises because the quantum
state vector, the source of all knowledge concerning quantum systems,
evolves according to the Schrödinger equation into a linear superposition of different states, predicting paradoxical situations such as "Schrödinger's cat";
situations never experienced in our classical world. Quantum theory has
traditionally treated this problem as being resolved by a non-unitary transformation of the state vector
at the time of measurement into a definite state. It provides an
extremely accurate means of predicting the value of the definite state
that will be measured in the form of a probability for each possible
measurement value. The physical nature of the transition from the
quantum superposition of states to the definite classical state measured
is not explained by the traditional theory but is usually assumed as an
axiom and was at the basis of the debate between Niels Bohr and Albert Einstein concerning the completeness of quantum theory.
Quantum Darwinism seeks to explain the transition of quantum
systems from the vast potentiality of superposed states to the greatly
reduced set of pointer states as a selection process, einselection,
imposed on the quantum system through its continuous interactions with
the environment. All quantum interactions, including measurements, but
much more typically interactions with the environment such as with the
sea of photons in which all quantum systems are immersed, lead to decoherence
or the manifestation of the quantum system in a particular basis
dictated by the nature of the interaction in which the quantum system is
involved. In the case of interactions with its environment Zurek and
his collaborators have shown that a preferred basis into which a quantum
system will decohere is the pointer basis underlying predictable
classical states. It is in this sense that the pointer states of
classical reality are selected from quantum reality and exist in the
macroscopic realm in a state able to undergo further evolution. However,
the 'einselection' program depends on assuming a particular division of
the universal quantum state into 'system' + 'environment', with the
different degrees of freedom of the environment posited as having
mutually random phases. This phase randomness does not arise from within
the quantum state of the universe on its own, and Ruth Kastner has pointed out that this limits the explanatory power of the Quantum
Darwinism program. Zurek replies to Kastner's criticism in Classical selection and quantum Darwinism.
As a quantum system's interactions with its environment results
in the recording of many redundant copies of information regarding its
pointer states, this information is available to numerous observers able
to achieve consensual agreement concerning their information of the
quantum state. This aspect of einselection, called by Zurek 'Environment
as a Witness', results in the potential for objective knowledge.
Relation to Universal Darwinism
Perhaps of equal significance to the light this theory shines on
quantum explanations is its identification of a Darwinian process
operating as the selective mechanism establishing our classical reality.
As numerous researchers have made clear any system employing a
Darwinian process will evolve. As argued by the thesis of Universal Darwinism, Darwinian processes are not confined to biology but are all following the simple Darwinian algorithm:
Reproduction/Heredity; the ability to make copies and thereby produce descendants.
Selection; A process that preferentially selects one trait over
another trait, leading to one trait being more numerous after sufficient
generations.
Variation; differences in heritable traits that affect "Fitness" or
the ability to survive and reproduce leading to differential survival.
Quantum Darwinism appears to conform to this algorithm and thus is aptly named:
Numerous copies are made of pointer states
Successive interactions between pointer states and their environment
reveal them to evolve and those states to survive which conform to the
predictions of classical physics within the macroscopic world. This
happens in a continuous, predictable manner; that is descendants inherit
many of their traits from ancestor states.
The analogy to the Variation principle of "simple Darwinism" does
not exist since the Pointer states do not mutate and the selection by
the environment is among the pointer states preferred by the environment
(e.g. location states).
From this view quantum Darwinism provides a Darwinian explanation at
the basis of our reality, explaining the unfolding or evolution of our
classical macroscopic world.
Figure 1. A source of light waves moving to the right, relative to observers, with velocity 0.7c. The frequency is higher for observers on the right, and lower for observers on the left.
The relativistic Doppler effect is the change in frequency, wavelength and amplitude of light, caused by the relative motion of the source and the observer (as in the classical Doppler effect, first proposed by Christian Doppler in 1842), when taking into account effects described by the special theory of relativity.
The relativistic Doppler effect is different from the non-relativistic Doppler effect as the equations include the time dilation effect of special relativity
and do not involve the medium of propagation as a reference point. They
describe the total difference in observed frequencies and possess the
required Lorentz symmetry.
Astronomers know of three sources of redshift/blueshift: Doppler shifts; gravitational redshifts (due to light exiting a gravitational field); and cosmological expansion (where space itself stretches). This article concerns itself only with Doppler shifts.
Summary of major results
In the following table, it is assumed that for the receiver and the source are moving away from each other, being the relative velocity and the speed of light, and .
Relativistic Doppler shift for the longitudinal case, with source and
receiver moving directly towards or away from each other, is often
derived as if it were the classical phenomenon, but modified by the
addition of a time dilation term.This is the approach employed in first-year physics or mechanics textbooks such as those by Feynman or Morin.
Following this approach towards deriving the relativistic
longitudinal Doppler effect, assume the receiver and the source are
moving away from each other with a relative speed as measured by an observer on the receiver or the source (The sign convention adopted here is that is negative if the receiver and the source are moving towards each other).
Suppose one wavefront arrives at the receiver. The next wavefront is then at a distance away from the receiver (where is the wavelength, is the frequency of the waves that the source emits, and is the speed of light).
The wavefront moves with speed , but at the same time the receiver moves away with speed during a time , which is the period of light waves impinging on the receiver, as observed in the frame of the source. So, where is the speed of the receiver in terms of the speed of light. The corresponding , the frequency at which wavefronts impinge on the receiver in the source's frame, is:
Thus far, the equations have been identical to those of the
classical Doppler effect with a stationary source and a moving receiver.
However, due to relativistic effects, clocks on the receiver are time dilated relative to clocks at the source: , where is the Lorentz factor. In order to know which time is dilated, we recall that is the time in the frame in which the source is at rest. The receiver will measure the received frequency to be
Eq. 1
The ratio
is called the Doppler factor of the source relative to the receiver. (This terminology is particularly prevalent in the subject of astrophysics: see relativistic beaming.)
Identical expressions for relativistic Doppler shift are obtained when performing the analysis in the reference frame of the receiver with a moving source. This matches up with the expectations of the principle of relativity,
which dictates that the result can not depend on which object is
considered to be the one at rest. In contrast, the classic
nonrelativistic Doppler effect is dependent on whether it is the source or the receiver that is stationary with respect to the medium.
Transverse Doppler effect
Suppose that a source and a receiver are both approaching each other
in uniform inertial motion along paths that do not collide. The transverse Doppler effect (TDE) may refer to (a) the nominal blueshift predicted by special relativity that occurs when the emitter and receiver are at their points of closest approach; or (b) the nominal redshift predicted by special relativity when the receiver sees the emitter as being at its closest approach. The transverse Doppler effect is one of the main novel predictions of the special theory of relativity.
Whether a scientific report describes TDE as being a redshift or
blueshift depends on the particulars of the experimental arrangement
being related. For example, Einstein's original description of the TDE
in 1907 described an experimenter looking at the center (nearest point)
of a beam of "canal rays"
(a beam of positive ions that is created by certain types of
gas-discharge tubes). According to special relativity, the moving ions'
emitted frequency would be reduced by the Lorentz factor, so that the
received frequency would be reduced (redshifted) by the same factor.
On the other hand, Kündig (1963) described an experiment where a Mössbauer absorber was spun in a rapid circular path around a central Mössbauer emitter. As explained below, this experimental arrangement resulted in Kündig's measurement of a blueshift.
Source and receiver are at their points of closest approach
Figure
2. Source and receiver are at their points of closest approach. (a)
Analysis in the frame of the receiver. (b) Analysis in the frame of the
source.
In this scenario, the point of closest approach is frame-independent
and represents the moment where there is no change in distance versus
time. Figure 2 demonstrates that the ease of analyzing this scenario
depends on the frame in which it is analyzed.
Figure 2a. If we analyze the scenario in the frame of the
receiver, we find that the analysis is more complicated than it should
be. The apparent position of a celestial object is displaced from its
true position (or geometric position) because of the object's motion
during the time it takes its light to reach an observer. The source
would be time-dilated relative to the receiver, but the redshift implied
by this time dilation would be offset by a blueshift due to the
longitudinal component of the relative motion between the receiver and
the apparent position of the source.
Figure 2b. It is much easier if, instead, we analyze the scenario
from the frame of the source. An observer situated at the source knows,
from the problem statement, that the receiver is at its closest point to
them. That means that the receiver has no longitudinal component of
motion to complicate the analysis. (i.e. dr/dt = 0 where r is the
distance between receiver and source) Since the receiver's clocks are
time-dilated relative to the source, the light that the receiver
receives is blue-shifted by a factor of gamma. In other words,
Eq. 3
Receiver sees the source as being at its closest point
Figure 3. Transverse Doppler shift for the scenario where the receiver sees the source as being at its closest point.
This scenario is equivalent to the receiver looking at a direct right
angle to the path of the source. The analysis of this scenario is best
conducted from the frame of the receiver. Figure 3 shows the receiver
being illuminated by light from when the source was closest to the
receiver, even though the source has moved on. Because the source's clock is time dilated as measured in the frame of
the receiver, and because there is no longitudinal component of its
motion, the light from the source, emitted from this closest point, is
redshifted with frequency
Eq. 4
In the literature, most reports of transverse Doppler shift analyze
the effect in terms of the receiver pointed at direct right angles to
the path of the source, thus seeing the source as being at its closest point and observing a redshift.
Point of null frequency shift
Figure 4. Null frequency shift occurs for a pulse that travels the shortest distance from source to receiver.
Given that, in the case where the inertially moving source and
receiver are geometrically at their nearest approach to each other, the
receiver observes a blueshift, whereas in the case where the receiver sees
the source as being at its closest point, the receiver observes a
redshift, there obviously must exist a point where blueshift changes to a
redshift. In Figure 2, the signal travels perpendicularly to the
receiver path and is blueshifted. In Figure 3, the signal travels
perpendicularly to the source path and is redshifted.
As seen in Figure 4, null frequency shift occurs for a pulse that
travels the shortest distance from source to receiver. When viewed in
the frame where source and receiver have the same speed, this pulse is
emitted perpendicularly to the source's path and is received
perpendicularly to the receiver's path. The pulse is emitted slightly
before the point of closest approach, and it is received slightly after.
One object in circular motion around the other
Figure
5. Transverse Doppler effect for two scenarios: (a) receiver moving in a
circle around the source; (b) source moving in a circle around the
receiver.
Figure 5 illustrates two variants of this scenario. Both variants can be analyzed using simple time dilation arguments. Figure 5a is essentially equivalent to the scenario described in
Figure 2b, and the receiver observes light from the source as being
blueshifted by a factor of . Figure 5b is essentially equivalent to the scenario described in Figure 3, and the light is redshifted.
The only seeming complication is that the orbiting objects are in
accelerated motion. An accelerated particle does not have an inertial
frame in which it is always at rest. However, an inertial frame can
always be found which is momentarily comoving with the particle. This
frame, the momentarily comoving reference frame (MCRF),
enables application of special relativity to the analysis of
accelerated particles. If an inertial observer looks at an accelerating
clock, only the clock's instantaneous speed is important when computing
time dilation.
The converse, however, is not true. The analysis of scenarios where both
objects are in accelerated motion requires a somewhat more
sophisticated analysis. Not understanding this point has led to
confusion and misunderstanding.
Source and receiver both in circular motion around a common center
Figure 6. Source and receiver are placed on opposite ends of a rotor, equidistant from the center.
Suppose source and receiver are located on opposite ends of a
spinning rotor, as illustrated in Figure 6. Kinematic arguments (special
relativity) and arguments based on noting that there is no difference
in potential between source and receiver in the pseudogravitational
field of the rotor (general relativity) both lead to the conclusion that
there should be no Doppler shift between source and receiver.
In 1961, Champeney and Moon conducted a Mössbauer rotor experiment testing exactly this scenario, and found that the Mössbauer absorption process was unaffected by rotation. They concluded that their findings supported special relativity.
This conclusion generated some controversy. A certain persistent critic of relativity maintained that, although the experiment was consistent with general
relativity, it refuted special relativity, his point being that since
the emitter and absorber were in uniform relative motion, special
relativity demanded that a Doppler shift be observed. The fallacy with
this critic's argument was, as demonstrated in section Point of null frequency shift, that it is simply not true that a Doppler shift must always be observed between two frames in uniform relative motion. Furthermore, as demonstrated in section Source and receiver are at their points of closest approach,
the difficulty of analyzing a relativistic scenario often depends on
the choice of reference frame. Attempting to analyze the scenario in the
frame of the receiver involves much tedious algebra. It is much easier,
almost trivial, to establish the lack of Doppler shift between emitter
and absorber in the laboratory frame.
As a matter of fact, however, Champeney and Moon's experiment
said nothing either pro or con about special relativity. Because of the
symmetry of the setup, it turns out that virtually any conceivable theory of the Doppler shift between frames in uniform inertial motion must yield a null result in this experiment.
Rather than being equidistant from the center, suppose the
emitter and absorber were at differing distances from the rotor's
center. For an emitter at radius and the absorber at radius anywhere on the rotor, the ratio of the emitter frequency, and the absorber frequency, is given by
Eq. 5
where
is the angular velocity of the rotor. The source and emitter do not
have to be 180° apart, but can be at any angle with respect to the
center.
Motion in an arbitrary direction
Figure 7. Doppler shift with source moving at an arbitrary angle with respect to the line between source and receiver.
The analysis used in section Relativistic longitudinal Doppler effect
can be extended in a straightforward fashion to calculate the Doppler
shift for the case where the inertial motions of the source and receiver
are at any specified angle.Figure 7 presents the scenario from the frame of the receiver, with the source moving at speed at an angle measured in the frame of the receiver. The radial component of the source's motion along the line of sight is equal to
The equation below can be interpreted as the classical Doppler
shift for a stationary and moving source modified by the Lorentz factor
In his 1905 paper on special relativity, Einstein obtained a somewhat different looking equation for the Doppler
shift equation. After changing the variable names in Einstein's
equation to be consistent with those used here, his equation reads
Eq. 7
The differences stem from the fact that Einstein evaluated the angle with respect to the source rest frame rather than the receiver rest frame. is not equal to because of the effect of relativistic aberration. The relativistic aberration equation is:
Eq. 8
Substituting the relativistic aberration equation Equation 8 into Equation 6 yields Equation 7, demonstrating the consistency of these alternate equations for the Doppler shift.
A four-vector approach to deriving these results may be found in Landau and Lifshitz (2005).
In electromagnetic waves both the electric and the magnetic field amplitudes E and B transform in a similar manner as the frequency:
Visualization
Figure 8. Comparison of the relativistic Doppler effect (top) with the non-relativistic effect (bottom).
Figure 8 helps us understand, in a rough qualitative sense, how the relativistic Doppler effect and relativistic aberration differ from the non-relativistic Doppler effect and non-relativistic aberration of light.
Assume that the observer is uniformly surrounded in all directions by
motionless yellow stars emitting monochromatic light of 570 nm. The
arrows in each diagram represent the observer's velocity vector relative
to its surroundings (and the medium, in non-relativistic case), with a
magnitude of 0.89 c.
In the relativistic case, the light ahead of the observer is
blueshifted to a wavelength of 137 nm in the far ultraviolet, while
light behind the observer is redshifted to 2400 nm in the short
wavelength infrared. Because of the relativistic aberration of light,
objects formerly at right angles to the observer appear shifted forwards
by 63°.
In the non-relativistic case, the light ahead of the observer is
blueshifted to a wavelength of 300 nm in the medium ultraviolet, while
light behind the observer is redshifted to 5200 nm in the intermediate
infrared. Because of the aberration of light, objects formerly at right
angles to the observer appear shifted forwards by 42°.
In both cases, the monochromatic stars ahead of and behind the
observer are Doppler-shifted towards invisible wavelengths. If, however,
the observer had eyes that could see into the ultraviolet and infrared,
they would see the stars ahead of them as brighter and more closely
clustered together than the stars behind, but the stars would be far
brighter and far more concentrated in the relativistic case.
Real stars are not monochromatic, but emit a range of wavelengths approximating a black body
distribution. It is not necessarily true that stars ahead of the
observer would show a bluer color. This is because the whole spectral
energy distribution is shifted. At the same time that visible light is
blueshifted into invisible ultraviolet wavelengths, infrared light is
blueshifted into the visible range. Precisely what changes in the colors
one sees depends on the physiology of the human eye and on the spectral
characteristics of the light sources being observed.
The Doppler effect (with arbitrary direction) also modifies the
perceived source intensity: this can be expressed concisely by the fact
that source strength divided by the cube of the frequency is a Lorentz
invariant. This implies that the total radiant intensity (summing over all
frequencies) is multiplied by the fourth power of the Doppler factor for
frequency.
As a consequence, since Planck's law describes the black-body radiation as having a spectral intensity in frequency proportional to (where is the source temperature and the frequency), we can draw the conclusion that a black body spectrum seen through a Doppler shift (with arbitrary direction) is still a black body spectrum with a temperature multiplied by the same Doppler factor as frequency.
This result provides one of the pieces of evidence that serves to distinguish the Big Bang theory from alternative theories proposed to explain the cosmological redshift.
Since the transverse Doppler effect is one of the main novel
predictions of the special theory of relativity, the detection and
precise quantification of this effect has been an important goal of
experiments attempting to validate special relativity.
Ives and Stilwell-type measurements
Figure 9. Why it is difficult to measure the transverse Doppler effect accurately using a transverse beam.
Einstein (1907) had initially suggested that the TDE might be measured by observing a beam of "canal rays" at right angles to the beam. Attempts to measure TDE following this scheme proved to be impractical,
since the maximum speed of a particle beam available at the time was
only a few thousandths of the speed of light.
Fig. 9 shows the results of attempting to measure the 4861
Angstrom line emitted by a beam of canal rays (a mixture of H1+, H2+,
and H3+ ions) as they recombine with electrons stripped from the dilute
hydrogen gas used to fill the Canal ray tube. Here, the predicted result
of the TDE is a 4861.06 Angstrom line. On the left, longitudinal
Doppler shift results in broadening the emission line to such an extent
that the TDE cannot be observed. The middle figures illustrate that even
if one narrows one's view to the exact center of the beam, very small
deviations of the beam from an exact right angle introduce shifts
comparable to the predicted effect.
Rather than attempt direct measurement of the TDE, Ives and Stilwell (1938)
used a concave mirror that allowed them to simultaneously observe a
nearly longitudinal direct beam (blue) and its reflected image (red).
Spectroscopically, three lines would be observed: An undisplaced
emission line, and blueshifted and redshifted lines. The average of the
redshifted and blueshifted lines would be compared with the wavelength
of the undisplaced emission line. The difference that Ives and Stilwell
measured corresponded, within experimental limits, to the effect
predicted by special relativity.
Various of the subsequent repetitions of the Ives and Stilwell
experiment have adopted other strategies for measuring the mean of
blueshifted and redshifted particle beam emissions. In some recent
repetitions of the experiment, modern accelerator technology has been
used to arrange for the observation of two counter-rotating particle
beams. In other repetitions, the energies of gamma rays emitted by a
rapidly moving particle beam have been measured at opposite angles
relative to the direction of the particle beam. Since these experiments
do not actually measure the wavelength of the particle beam at right
angles to the beam, some authors have preferred to refer to the effect
they are measuring as the "quadratic Doppler shift" rather than TDE.
Direct measurement of transverse Doppler effect
The advent of particle accelerator
technology has made possible the production of particle beams of
considerably higher energy than was available to Ives and Stilwell. This
has enabled the design of tests of the transverse Doppler effect
directly along the lines of how Einstein originally envisioned them,
i.e. by directly viewing a particle beam at a 90° angle. For example,
Hasselkamp et al. (1979) observed the Hα line emitted by hydrogen atoms moving at speeds ranging from 2.53×108 cm/s to 9.28×108 cm/s,
finding the coefficient of the second order term in the relativistic
approximation to be 0.52±0.03, in excellent agreement with the
theoretical value of 1/2.
Other direct tests of the TDE on rotating platforms were made possible by the discovery of the Mössbauer effect, which enables the production of exceedingly narrow resonance lines for nuclear gamma ray emission and absorption. Mössbauer effect experiments have proven themselves easily capable of
detecting TDE using emitter-absorber relative velocities on the order of
2×104 cm/s. These experiments include ones performed by Hay et al. (1960), Champeney et al. (1965), and Kündig (1963).
Time dilation measurements
The transverse Doppler effect and the kinematic time dilation of
special relativity are closely related. All validations of TDE represent
validations of kinematic time dilation, and most validations of
kinematic time dilation have also represented validations of TDE. An
online resource, "What is the experimental basis of Special Relativity?"
has documented, with brief commentary, many of the tests that, over the
years, have been used to validate various aspects of special
relativity. Kaivola et al. (1985) and McGowan et al. (1993) are examples of experiments classified in this resource as time
dilation experiments. These two also represent tests of TDE. These
experiments compared the frequency of two lasers, one locked to the
frequency of a neon atom transition in a fast beam, the other locked to
the same transition in thermal neon. The 1993 version of the experiment
verified time dilation, and hence TDE, to an accuracy of 2.3×10−6.
Relativistic Doppler effect for sound and light
Figure 10. The relativistic Doppler shift formula is applicable to both sound and light.
First-year physics textbooks almost invariably analyze Doppler shift
for sound in terms of Newtonian kinematics, while analyzing Doppler
shift for light and electromagnetic phenomena in terms of relativistic
kinematics. This gives the false impression that acoustic phenomena
require a different analysis than light and radio waves.
The traditional analysis of the Doppler effect for sound
represents a low speed approximation to the exact, relativistic
analysis. The fully relativistic analysis for sound is, in fact, equally
applicable to both sound and electromagnetic phenomena.
Consider the spacetime diagram in Fig. 10. Worldlines for a
tuning fork (the source) and a receiver are both illustrated on this
diagram. The tuning fork and receiver start at O, at which point the
tuning fork starts to vibrate, emitting waves and moving along the
negative x-axis while the receiver starts to move along the positive
x-axis. The tuning fork continues until it reaches A, at which point it
stops emitting waves: a wavepacket has therefore been generated, and all
the waves in the wavepacket are received by the receiver with the last
wave reaching it at B. The proper time for the duration of the packet in
the tuning fork's frame of reference is the length of OA while the
proper time for the duration of the wavepacket in the receiver's frame
of reference is the length of OB. If waves were emitted, then , while ; the inverse slope of AB represents the speed of signal propagation (i.e. the speed of sound) to event B. We can therefore write the speed of sound as
and the speeds of the source and receiver as
and the lengths
and are assumed to be less than
since otherwise their passage through the medium will set up shock
waves, invalidating the calculation. Some routine algebra gives the
ratio of frequencies:
Eq. 9
If and are small compared with , the above equation reduces to the classical Doppler formula for sound.
If the speed of signal propagation approaches , it can be shown that the absolute speeds and
of the source and receiver merge into a single relative speed
independent of any reference to a fixed medium. Indeed, we obtain Equation 1, the formula for relativistic longitudinal Doppler shift.
Analysis of the spacetime diagram in Fig. 10 gave a general
formula for source and receiver moving directly along their line of
sight, i.e. in collinear motion.
Figure
11. A source and receiver are moving in different directions and speeds
in a frame where the speed of sound is independent of direction.
Fig. 11 illustrates a scenario in two dimensions. The source moves with velocity (at the time of emission). It emits a signal which travels at velocity towards the receiver, which is traveling at velocity at the time of reception. The analysis is performed in a coordinate system in which the signal's speed is independent of direction.
The ratio between the proper frequencies for the source and receiver is
Eq. 10
The leading ratio has the form of the classical Doppler effect, while
the square root term represents the relativistic correction. If we
consider the angles relative to the frame of the source, then and the equation reduces to Equation 7, Einstein's 1905 formula for the Doppler effect. If we consider the angles relative to the frame of the receiver, then and the equation reduces to Equation 6, the alternative form of the Doppler shift equation discussed previously.