dedo Posted January 29 Posted January 29 Are you aware if the apparent superluminal velocities observed with relativistic jets from quasars is a settled issue as being caused by the angle of observation? I have heard that this explanation is disputed, but that was some time ago. Is it settled now?
Halc Posted January 30 Posted January 30 There are no superluminal jets. The effect in question was simple motion more or less towards Earth, and it only requires a velocity in our direction of > 0.5c. So let's say a space ship begins a journey to Earth from a point 3 LY away, at a constant speed of 0.6c. At time 0 (years), it departs, to arrive at time 5, but we don't see that departure for 3 years since it takes 3 years for light to get to us from that far away. So at time 3 we observe the departure from 3 LY away and at time 5 it gets here. So to us it looks like the ship took only two years to go 3 LY, superluminal, right? No, since time for light travel was not taken into account in that calculation. Ditto for the jets, which only appear fast due to this sort of Doppler compression. 2
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