Relative velocities, geometry, and expansion of space
Vicente J. Bol\'os, Sam Havens, David Klein

TL;DR
This paper examines how different coordinate-independent definitions of relative velocity can clarify the concept of space expansion, especially through superluminal velocities, in cosmological models.
Contribution
It reviews four geometric notions of relative velocity, applies them to expanding cosmologies, and establishes conditions for superluminal speeds, enhancing understanding of space expansion.
Findings
Four inequivalent relative velocities are reviewed and applied.
Conditions for superluminal Fermi velocities are derived.
Relative velocities can determine spacetime properties and the scale factor.
Abstract
What does it mean to say that space expands? One approach to this question is the study of relative velocities. In this context, a non local test particle is "superluminal" if its relative velocity exceeds the local speed of light of the observer. The existence of superluminal relative velocities of receding test particles, in a particular cosmological model, suggests itself as a possible criterion for expansion of space in that model. In this point of view, superluminal velocities of distant receding galaxy clusters result from the expansion of space between the observer and the clusters. However, there is a fundamental ambiguity that must be resolved before this approach can be meaningful. The notion of relative velocity of a nonlocal object depends on the choice of coordinates, and this ambiguity suggests the need for coordinate independent definitions. In this work, we review four…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
