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Since the Universe is expanding and light stretches across it as it does so becoming more red, what happens to the lost energy when the shorter wavelength, higher energy light towards the blue end of the spectrum is shifted into lower energy red wavelengths?
Similarly a rock moving at a nonzero peculiar speed will slow down without any external forces or reaction. The kinetic energy is lost.
Quote from: Halc on 06/09/2021 15:47:15Similarly a rock moving at a nonzero peculiar speed will slow down without any external forces or reaction.What does it mean?Will the rock eventually stop?
Similarly a rock moving at a nonzero peculiar speed will slow down without any external forces or reaction.
Energy conservation is a property of (among others) an inertial reference frame, and is not conserved in a metric with expanding space, so the energy is gone.
Consider the same light in an inertial reference frame, say the 'redshifted' light from a galaxy 2 billion light years away, in the inertial frame of our solar system, and that light didn't lose energy at all and was redshifted in that frame from the moment it was emitted (due to the recession velocity of the emitting galaxy).
I've taken some liberties and edited your quote.
We cannot extend an inertial frame centred on our own solar system out to cover a galaxy that was 2 billion light years away even if we wanted to. In particular, objects at a great distance from the origin of that frame would not behave as if they were in an inertial frame.
Interestingly, I cannot see angular kinetic energy reducing, so a spinning rock (at say 10 RPM) will seemingly spin at 10 RPM forever in the absence of external torque. The expanding universe doesn't drain that.I'm not sure of this. Counter-arguments welcome.
I'm not sure what you were saying there.
The red shifted light is weakened but all the photons are still there blue shifted light is strengthened as it is compressed all the energy remains the same only arriving at different times.
That's not true. Photons with longer wavelengths have less energy than those with shorter wavelengths. The speed of light also does not vary with wavelength, so a red-shifted photon will arrive at the same time as a blue-shifted photon.
Not so true if a star is moving away at a high velocity the light emitted from it will be less extreme this is what makes the redshift. Each photon is arriving later and later due to the star moving away this is the stretching of the light.
All right, so long as you understand that light of all wavelengths moves at the same speed.
This is the shift and nothing is lost or gained by the shift.
This is complicated,
If we take a given galaxy let's say a billion light years away and we conclude that it is redshifted and we conclude that it is moving away from us at 10% the speed of light
Energy is.