Jonathan Silverlight wrote in message ...
In message , Aladar
writes
Now, on the other hand, there is a perfectly good, coherent
representation of matter structure [a candy for the correct answer!]
which results in the photon energy loss with an exponential to
the distance rate - z =2^(t/Hd)-1 where t is the time of photon
travel and Hd =4.111 bly Hubble photon wavelength doubling time
constant. It is around 170 km/s per Mpc for the linear approximation
for very small redshifts.
I thought your figure was Hd = 4.234 billion
years. Given that you're quoting it to 4 decimal places, isn't that a
rather large difference?
I know... shame of me...
The worst part of it
I have to admit
it's coming from the fact that E not = mc^2, but E=0.9722mc^2 ...
I had to go back to the drawing board...
And found this.
Cheers!
Aladar
http://www.stolmarphysics.com