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I outline what redshifts are and how they are used as a distance measure in the Universe. The usual practice is to equate redshift to expansion of space then in an expanding universe the greater the redshift the greater the distance in the Universe. That is known as the Hubble law. But can this be justified from laboratory experiments? How sure are we that the universe began in a big bang? Does it all come down to our interpretation of what redshifts are?
Additional Resources
- Quasar with enormous redshift found embedded in nearby spiral galaxy with far lower redshift: unsolvable riddle for big bang astronomy
- DVD: Hubble, Bubble: Big Bang in Trouble
- IS THERE DEFINITIVE EVIDENCE FOR AN EXPANDING UNIVERSE?
- TENSION NOT EXTENSION IN CREATION COSMOLOGY
- THE LARGEST STRUCTURE IN THE OBSERVABLE UNIVERSE OR COSMIC VARIANCE?
- HALTON ARP—BIG-BANG-DEFYING GIANT PASSES AWAY