Putting the theory of special relativity into practice, by counting galaxies
âI love the idea that this basic principle that Einstein told us about a long time ago is something you can see,â CU Boulder astrophysicist says
Scientists who study the cosmos have a favorite philosophy known as the âmediocrity principle,â which, in essence, suggests that thereâs really nothing special about Earth, the Sun or the Milky Way galaxy compared to the rest of the universe.
Now, new research from CU Boulder adds yet another piece of evidence to the case for mediocrity: Galaxies are, on average, at rest with respect to the early universe. Jeremy Darling, a CU Boulder astrophysics professor, recently published this new cosmological finding in the journal Astrophysical Journal Letters.
âWhat this research is telling us is that we have a funny motion, but that funny motion is consistent with everything we know about the universeâthereâs nothing special going on here,â said Darling. âWeâre not special as a galaxy or as observers.â
Roughly 35 years ago, researchers discovered the cosmic microwave background, which is electromagnetic radiation left over from the universeâs formation during the Big Bang. The cosmic microwave background appears warmer in the direction of our motion and cooler away from the direction of our motion.Ìę
From this glow of the early universe, scientists can infer that the Sunâand the Earth orbiting around itâis moving in a certain direction, at a certain speed. Researchers find that our inferred velocity is a fraction of a percent of the speed of lightâsmall, but not zero.
Scientists can independently test this inference by counting the galaxies that are visible from Earth or adding up their brightness. They can do this thanks largely to Albert Einsteinâs 1905 theory of special relativity, which explains how speed affects time and space. In this application, a person on Earth looking out into the universe in one directionâthe same direction that the Sun and the Earth are movingâshould see galaxies that are brighter, bluer and more concentrated. Similarly, by looking the other direction, the person should see galaxies that are darker, redder and spaced farther apart.
But when investigators have tried to count galaxies in recent yearsâa process thatâs difficult to do accuratelyâtheyâve come up with numbers that suggest the Sun is moving much faster than previously thought, which is at odds with standard cosmology.
âItâs hard to count galaxies over the whole skyâyouâre usually stuck with a hemisphere or less,â said Darling. âAnd, on top of that, our own galaxy gets in the way. It has dust that will cause you to find fewer galaxies and will make them look dimmer as you get closer to our galaxy.â
Darling was intrigued and perplexed by this cosmological puzzle, so he decided to investigate for himself. He also knew there were two recently released surveys that could help improve the accuracy of a galaxy countâand shed light on the velocity mystery: one called the Very Large Array Sky Survey (VLASS) in New Mexico, and the other called the Rapid Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder Continuum Survey (RACS) in Australia.
Together, these surveys allowed Darling to study the entire sky by patching together views from the northern and southern hemispheres. Importantly, the new surveys also used radio waves, which made it easier to âseeâ through the dust of the Milky Way, thus improving the view of the universe.
When Darling analyzed the surveys, he found that the number of galaxies and their brightness was in perfect agreement with the velocity researchers had previously inferred from the cosmic microwave background.
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I love the idea that this basic principle that Einstein told us about a long time ago is something you can see.ÌęItâs a really esoteric thing that seems super weird, but if you go out and count galaxies, you could see this neat effect. Itâs not quite as esoteric or weird as you might think.â
âWe find a bright direction and a dim directionâwe find a direction where there are more galaxies and a direction where there are fewer galaxies,â he said. âThe big difference is that it lines up with the early universe from the cosmic microwave background and it has the right speed. Our cosmology is just fine.â
Because Darlingâs findings differ from past results, his paper will likely prompt various follow-up studies to confirm or dispute his results.
But in addition to pushing the field of cosmology forward, the findings are a good real-world example of Einsteinâs special relativity theoryâand they demonstrate how researchers are still putting the theory into practice, more than 100 years after the famed physicist first proposed it.
âI love the idea that this basic principle that Einstein told us about a long time ago is something you can see,â Darling said. âItâs a really esoteric thing that seems super weird, but if you go out and count galaxies, you could see this neat effect. Itâs not quite as esoteric or weird as you might think.â