Distance measure should not be confused with Distance measurement.
Distance measures are used in physical cosmology to give a natural notion of the distance between two objects or events in the universe. They are often used to tie some observable quantity (such as the luminosity of a distant quasar, the redshift of a distant galaxy, or the angular size of the acoustic peaks in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) power spectrum) to another quantity that is not directly observable, but is more convenient for calculations (such as the comoving coordinates of the quasar, galaxy, etc.). The distance measures discussed here all reduce to the common notion of Euclidean distance at low redshift.
In accord with our present understanding of cosmology, these measures are calculated within the context of general relativity, where the Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker solution is used to describe the universe.
There are a few different definitions of "distance" in cosmology which are all asymptotic one to another for small redshifts. The expressions for these distances are most practical when written as functions of redshift
z
a=1/(1+z).
In the remainder of this article, the peculiar velocity is assumed to be negligible unless specified otherwise.
We first give formulas for several distance measures, and then describe them in more detail further down. Defining the "Hubble distance" aswhere
c
H0
z ⋅ dH
According to the Friedmann equations, we also define a dimensionless Hubble parameter:
Here,
\Omegar,\Omegam,
\OmegaΛ
\Omegak=1-\Omegar-\Omegam-\OmegaΛ
H(z)=H0E(z)
The formula for comoving distance, which serves as the basis for most of the other formulas, involves an integral. Although for some limited choices of parameters (see below) the comoving distance integral has a closed analytic form, in general—and specifically for the parameters of our universe—we can only find a solution numerically. Cosmologists commonly use the following measures for distances from the observer to an object at redshift
z
\frac \sinh\left(\frac\right) & \Omega_k>0\\ d_C(z) & \Omega_k=0\\ \frac \sin\left(\frac\right) & \Omega_k<0\end
Peebles calls the transverse comoving distance the "angular size distance", which is not to be mistaken for the angular diameter distance.[2] Occasionally, the symbols
\chi
r
In real observations, the movement of the Earth with respect to the Hubble flow has an effect on the observed redshift.
There are actually two notions of redshift. One is the redshift that would be observed if both the Earth and the object were not moving with respect to the "comoving" surroundings (the Hubble flow), defined by the cosmic microwave background. The other is the actual redshift measured, which depends both on the peculiar velocity of the object observed and on their peculiar velocity. Since the Solar System is moving at around 370 km/s in a direction between Leo and Crater, this decreases
1+z
See main article: Comoving distance.
The comoving distance
dC
In standard cosmology, comoving distance and proper distance are two closely related distance measures used by cosmologists to measure distances between objects; the comoving distance is the proper distance at the present time.
The comoving distance (with a small correction for our own motion) is the distance that would be obtained from parallax, because the parallax in degrees equals the ratio of an astronomical unit to the circumference of a circle at the present time going through the sun and centred on the distant object, multiplied by 360°. However, objects beyond a megaparsec have parallax too small to be measured (the Gaia space telescope measures the parallax of the brightest stars with a precision of 7 microarcseconds), so the parallax of galaxies outside our Local Group is too small to be measured.
There is a closed-form expression for the integral in the definition of the comoving distance if
\Omegar=\Omegam=0
a
1/(1+z)
\OmegaΛ=0
\Omegar=\Omegak=0.
The comoving distance should be calculated using the value of that would pertain if neither the object nor we had a peculiar velocity.
Together with the scale factor it gives the proper distance of the object when the light we see now was emitted by the it, and set off on its journey to us:
Proper distance roughly corresponds to where a distant object would be at a specific moment of cosmological time, which can change over time due to the expansion of the universe. Comoving distance factors out the expansion of the universe, which gives a distance that does not change in time due to the expansion of space (though this may change due to other, local factors, such as the motion of a galaxy within a cluster); the comoving distance is the proper distance at the present time.
Two comoving objects at constant redshift
z
\delta\theta
\delta\thetadM(z)
dM
See main article: Angular diameter distance.
An object of size
x
z
\delta\theta
dA(z)=x/\delta\theta
When accounting for the earth's peculiar velocity, the redshift that would pertain in that case should be used but
dA
See main article: Luminosity distance.
L
S
dL(z)
When accounting for the earth's peculiar velocity, the redshift that would pertain in that case should be used for
dM,
(1+z)
(1+z)2,
(also known as "lookback time" or "lookback distance")[3]
This distance
dT
There is a closed-form solution of the light-travel distance if
\Omegar=\Omegam=0
arcosh
arsinh
\Omegar=\OmegaΛ=0
dT(z)
z(dT).
Note that the comoving distance is recovered from the transverse comoving distance by taking the limit
\Omegak\to0
There are websites for calculating light-travel distance from redshift.[4] [5] [6] [7]
The age of the universe then becomes
\limz\toinftydT(z)/c
z
t(z)=dT(z)/c.
See main article: Etherington's reciprocity theorem.
The Etherington's distance-duality equation [8] is the relationship between the luminosity distance of standard candles and the angular-diameter distance. It is expressed as follows:
dL=(1+z)2dA