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The midpoint would be 1.27 million light years. You cannot simply state that this is the point that they meet since a) the universe is expanding and b) there could be forces present along the photon paths that could deflect them. These are just two of the complications that could throw out any calculation.
The Sun is thought to be about 4.5 billion years old.A (younger) Andromeda galaxy would have existed well before that.So photons from both would have passed each other about 4.5 billion years ago.Andromeda is approaching our Milky Way galaxy; they are expected to collide in about 5 billion years.So we could assume that they were about 5 million light-years apart at the time of the Sun's formation.Photons from Andromeda would have been "in flight" for at least 5 million years prior to the Sun's formation, so the photons from the Andromeda galaxy would have reached the Sun as soon as the Sun burnt its way out of the dust cloud in which it formed.
Is (it) 1.27 million light years or merely 1.27 million years?
You cannot simply state that this is the point that they meet since a) the universe is expanding
b) there could be forces present along the photon paths that could deflect them.
Quote from: xersanozgenIs (it) 1.27 million light years or merely 1.27 million years?Both.In a vacuum, light travels at "the speed of light".- So in space, light travels 1 light-year in 1 year.- And 1.27 million light years in 1.27 million yearsIf you look at photons emitted now by the Sun and Andromeda, they will pass at the half-way point, which is 1.27 million light years away, in 1.27 million years.
The latest expansion rate measurement is about 71.9 kilometers per second per megaparsec. Since the Andromeda is 0.78 megaparsecs away, we'd expect the expansion rate to be about 56 kilometers per second between our two galaxies. Over a period of 1.27 million years, they'd only increase in distance from each other by about 237 light-years, an increase of less than 0.02 percent. So although it's true that the distance would change over that period of time, it's only a very small amount.
In that case, the distance between two photons decreases by a value ' 2 c ' of velocity; or the collision speed is 2c.
Quote from: xersanozgen In that case, the distance between two photons decreases by a value ' 2 c ' of velocity; or the collision speed is 2c. Relative to an observer *, or to each other?
In CERN, If the particles accelerate up to big fractions of c; the collision speed can be bigger than ' c '.
If you work out the collision velocity as seen by one of the protons, the velocity of the oncoming proton is still less than c.
If the objects get their speed by their own pattern independently ***(that Einstein had ignored this option; but, we can distinguish and internalize the types of relativity), the collision speed must find by additing directly (top limit 2c). In that case radial speeds can get a value up to 2.c
Quote from: xersanozgen on 24/09/2017 09:24:41If the objects get their speed by their own pattern independently ***(that Einstein had ignored this option; but, we can distinguish and internalize the types of relativity), the collision speed must find by additing directly (top limit 2c). In that case radial speeds can get a value up to 2.c Radial speed is the escaping speed of sky object from Earth. In fact, it is the total of the vectoral components which the projections of universe expansion speed upon observational line for the Earth and sky object. So, the speeds of two objects are mentioned; therefore the top limit of radial speeds is 2.c .The theory of SR declared a single c value for the top limit of radial speed. However, its formula (to transform the redshifts) is not correct.
Quote from: evan_au on 23/09/2017 05:33:40Quote from: xersanozgenIs (it) 1.27 million light years or merely 1.27 million years?Both.In a vacuum, light travels at "the speed of light".- So in space, light travels 1 light-year in 1 year.- And 1.27 million light years in 1.27 million yearsIf you look at photons emitted now by the Sun and Andromeda, they will pass at the half-way point, which is 1.27 million light years away, in 1.27 million years.Yes, you are right certainly. Thanks. In that case, the distance between two photons decreases by a value ' 2 c ' of velocity; or the collision speed is 2c.In CERN, If the particules accelerate up to big fractions of c; the collision speed can be bigger than ' c '.
V = (v + w) / (1 + v.w/c²) This formula is valid for genuine relativity (If we throw a rocket from/over another rocket; the speed of relative rocket doesn't exceed the value ' c ').