| This is probably really dumb but I'm interested to hear people's reactions to yet another amateur dark energy theory. Could the observation that the universe is expanding actually be the result of a sort of gravitational lensing and not the result of space expanding or bodies moving through space? My rough line of thinking is: - We believe that gravity has a warping effect on spacetime.
- We believe that this warping can distort light.
- When we observe light from distant galaxies, it must first exit the gravity well of the source, traverse the universe and then make its way down into our gravity well.
- Therefore, the light must have been subject to some distortion. It traversed two regions of 'stretched' space time and so became 'stretched' itself.
- This 'stretching' is interpreted as redshift and is indistinguishable from if the light source had just been moving away quickly.
Naively, I would have thought this interpretation explains a couple of things quite well: - Light would be redshifted in every direction as every bright and distant source (i.e. galaxies) resides in a large gravity well.
- It would explain a lack of redshift in nearby objects as we sit in a broadly similar part of the Milky Way's gravity well. As such the relative lensing effect would not be apparent.
Anyway, I obviously have no idea what I'm talking about and someone will have thought of this before - however I'm interested to know why the theory doesn't work.Most likely I don't really understand gravitational lensing and it wouldn't distort the wavelength of light as I suggested. Alternatively, perhaps someone has done the maths and the impact of any such effect does not align with observations. edit: formatting |