4.8.2 Red Shift (physics only) Flashcards

1
Q

What is red shift?

A
  • observed increase in wavelength of light from more distant galaxies compared to light from closer galaxies
  • the further away the galaxies the faster they are moving and the bigger the observed increase in wavelength
  • so more distant galaxies appear more red as red is longest wavelength in light
  • this effect is called Red Shift
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2
Q

What does red shift tell us?

A
  • tells us that galaxies are moving away from each other
  • as the galaxies are moving away their light waves are stretched aka their observed wavelength is increased
  • so these galaxies are moving faster than galaxies that are closer
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3
Q

Difference between nearby and distant galaxies?

A
  • nearby galaxies have a small redshift showing us that they are moving away
  • more distant galaxies have a larger shift showing us that they are moving away faster
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4
Q

What can the observed red shift provide evidence for?

A

the observed red shift (the fact that distant galaxies are moving faster than nearby galaxies) provides evidence that space itself (the universe) is expanding and supports the Big bang theory

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5
Q

What does the Big Bang theory suggest?

A
  • Big bang theory suggests that the universe began from a very small region that was extremely hot and dense
  • this region then expanded into the Universe we see today
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6
Q

What happened around 1988?

A
  • sine 1988 onwards observations of supernovae suggest that distant galaxies are receding faster than ever
  • scientists had assumed that gravity would cause the expansion of the universe to gradually slow down
  • so rather than gradually growing down the universe is expanding faster - scientists cannot easily explain this
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7
Q

What are some theories scientists have suggested?

A
  • scientists have suggested that the universe contains matter and energy that we cannot detect - dark matter and dark energy
  • possible that these could explain why the expansion of the universe is speeding up
  • still much about the universe that is not understood e.g. dark mass and dark energy
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8
Q

How might new evidence support a theory?

A
  • supports prediction
  • provides evidence that theory/equation is true
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9
Q

What do new observations suggest is happening to the universe?

A

Expanding at ever greater rate

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10
Q

Why is peer review important?

A
  • can detect false claims
  • detects inaccurate data
  • detects bias
  • verifies new data
  • provides a consensus of opinions
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11
Q

What shows that the universe began from a very small region?

A
  • galaxies furthest away moving the fastest
  • suggests that the Universe is expanding from a very small region
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12
Q

How can predicted data be considered accurate?

A

If it is very close to actual data

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