Sunday, May 26, 2013

Discord for Discordant Redshifts. I.

In a previous series of posts, I reviewed Halton Arp's book, Seeing Red (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3).  This post was only the most recent public activity on an issue that I had worked on for a number of years.

To recap, the topic of discordant redshifts is the idea that the redshifts of extragalactic objects may not be a reliable indicator of the object's distance via the Hubble Law, and that many high-redshift quasars are physically very close to nearby regular galaxies.

There are three primary lines of evidence supporters of this interpretation argue:
  1. The claimed low-probability of such alignments and associations
  2. A correlation that higher-redshift objects tend to be closer to the foreground galaxy.  That is, the apparent separation on the sky, theta, is inversely correlated with the redshift of the quasar, z_q
    (Equation 1) 
  3. Apparent connections between the high and low-redshift objects
In this post, I will deal primarily with items 1 & 2.  I'll explore in detail the claim by discordant redshift supporters that the cosmological interpretation of quasar redshifts cannot explain the apparent correlation that quasar redshifts appear to be higher, the closer they appear to the 'parent' galaxy.

I had actually followed this topic for a number of years.  One of the most annoying issues I found with every paper advocating discordant redshifts was the chronic quoting of probabilities of a given distance or alignment with no clear information on precisely how this quantity was computed - the equation, and the input values.  Recently I did find what is apparently the original source paper for these calculations, by Burbidge, Burbidge, Solomon and Strittmatter, often referred to as the B2S2 paper,  Apparent Associations Between Bright Galaxies and Quasi-Stellar Objects.  The relevant equations are 1 & 2 from this paper. 
(equation 2)
where lambda is space density of galaxies PER SQUARE DEGREE.  The average number of close association you would expect to detect,n,  in the region around the galaxy becomes:
  (equation 3)
for sample of N galaxies within an angular radius r (measured in arcminutes, and corresponds to the same parameter as theta in equation 1 above).

As recently as 1990 (Associations between quasi-stellar objects and galaxies), Burbidge was still using these probabilities, and arguing item 2, that the theta-z correlation cannot happen in the cosmological interpretation.

The most serious problem with these probability computations is that they treat the probability distribution of galaxies on the sky as if it were strictly a 2-dimensional sphere covered with random points.  The galaxy density is even measured in SQUARE DEGREES.  It also assumes that all these points are equivalent, and independent of redshift, brightness. 

But galaxies in the cosmos are actually distributed in a 3-dimensional (okay, actually 4-dimensional) space.  Their visibility is determined not just by their position on the sky, but by their brightness as well.  This creates a bias known among astronomers as the Malmquist bias (wikipedia).  This is the reason why the stars we see in the night sky are not representative of all stars, but biased by bright, giant stars, which can still be seen even when they are much, much farther away.

So it is with quasars and QSOs in the standard cosmological model.
Slice of the sky created by the observer's field-of-view
Suppose we consider the universe as a 3-dimensional space, with some uniform density of galaxies, n0, per cubic volume.  In the cosmological interpretation, the redshift, z, is a proxy for distance, r, so
where v is the recession velocity and H is the Hubble constant.  This lets us examine the volume of space in terms of measured redshifts, z.  If we look out across the sky, the number of objects we can expect to see, with a redshift between z and z+dz is

(equation 4)

If we consider the volume of space between the foreground galaxies at r0, and background galaxies, r1 (between redshifts of z_0 and z_1, respectively), we find

(equation 5)

We get several interesting consequences from this result.
  1. For a given field of view, we will count more galaxies with increasing redshift, z.  For a given range of redshift, the number of galaxies will increase at the SQUARE of the redshift value.  In other words, in a field where we count 10 galaxies with redshift z=0.0-0.01, then on average, we should see 1000 galaxies with z=0.10-0.11! 
  2. The results are even more dramatic when we consider the entire volume of space, comparing the number of galaxies z=0.0 to z=0.01 with from z=0.01 to z=0.11.   Using equation 5 above, if we find 10 galaxies between z=0.0 to z=0.01, there are almost 10,000 more galaxies in the same field of view, if we sample out to z=0.1!
  3. The side effect of (1) is that, if for a fixed area of sky, the number of galaxies in that section of sky increases as z^2.  Therefore the average projected angular distance between those galaxies for a given redshift *decreases* with increasing redshift, so d is proportional to 1/z.
Therefore we see that for the cosmological interpretation, the probability of angular separation of the quasar with any random location in the field will increase with decreasing redshift, z. 

This is the effect which Arp, Burbidge, and other discordant redshift supporters claim cannot happen in the standard cosmological model!  Yet it is a simple aspect of a distribution of uniform points in a 3-dimensional volume!

Now this example was so simple, I was astonished that, with all the papers on discordant redshifts I'd read, I had been unable to find this derivation anywhere else.  Certainly someone else had recognized this simple analysis!

I had a very difficult time trying to find a paper with an equivalent analysis, until very recently, when I found a paper by López-Corredoira & Gutierrez (The field surrounding NGC 7603: Cosmological or non-cosmological redshifts?).  This paper made a passing reference to a 1975 paper by P.D. Noerdlinger (Reexamination of the correlation of galaxies and QSO's ), which did reproduce the analysis above, and more!

As of this writing, the Noerdlinger paper has been cited a mere five times.  Only two of those citations by those advocating discordant redshifts, and they only mention the paper, not addressing the challenge it creates for their interpretation of redshift.  It illustrates the dilemma I pointed out in Why Don't Rebuttals Appear in Scientific Literature? about how rebuttals to bad science receive very little recognition. 

Next, turning the math above into pictures.
Update 5/27/2013: Minor edits.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Bump in the road...

I've got a backlog of posts at various stages of almost complete and just in need of some tuning, graphics generation, and final proof-reading before release.  I'm also now officially on the docket to give a presentation at Balticon  in the skeptical thinking track sponsored by the National Capital Area Skeptics (NCAS) and am assembling that presentation.

What a great time to start experiencing computer problems...

My almost six-year old laptop picked this weekend to develop some serious behaviors that come and go.  I had been stalling replacement for at least two years (even having the logic board replaced about two years ago) and I guess I can stall no more.

Since I have a lot of software (see Building a Scientific Toolbox on MacOS X 10.6 Snow Leopard (64-bit build) ) that I now have to build on a significantly newer OS (10.8) along with a number of other configuration issues, that time has to come from somewhere.  I've decided to delay some of the almost-ready posts to complete the configuration and the Balticon presentation.  Hopefully this delay will be no longer than 2-3 weeks.

And incidentally...

I choose my system names from a long list of notable dead physicists and/or astronomers.  For various reasons, I'm leaning towards naming the new machine Birkeland, or perhaps Alfven.  Like all the names I've chosen for previous machines, the researchers have a track record that includes things they got right and things they got wrong.  I wonder how many of these researchers have had their historical standing diminished by the number of crank web sites which try to promote as correct, the things the researcher got wrong, as if the researcher were infallible, like some type of religious leader.

In the meantime, I hope you'll check out Stuart Robbins' latest podcast covering the flawed image analysis techniques so common behind pseudo-scientific claims (Episode 73: Image Analysis for Skeptics: From Faces to Pyramids).  These will become relevant to some of my future posts.

So...What Happened?

Wow.  It's been over eight years since I last posted here... When I stepped back in August 2015,...