English
Noun
- In the context of "physics": A change in the wavelength of light, in which the wavelength is
longer than when it was emitted at the source.
Translations
In
physics and
astronomy, redshift occurs
when the
electromagnetic
radiation, usually
visible
light, that is emitted from or reflected off an object is
shifted towards the (less energetic) red end of the
electromagnetic
spectrum. More generally, redshift is defined as an increase in
the
wavelength of
electromagnetic
radiation received by a detector compared with the wavelength
emitted by the source. This increase in wavelength corresponds
to a decrease in the
frequency of the
electromagnetic
radiation. Conversely, a decrease in wavelength is called
blue
shift.
Any increase in wavelength is called "redshift",
even if it occurs in electromagnetic radiation of non-optical
wavelengths, such as
gamma rays,
x-rays and
ultraviolet. This
nomenclature might be confusing since, at wavelengths longer than
red (e.g.,
infrared,
microwaves, and
radio
waves), redshifts shift the radiation away from the red
wavelengths.
An observed redshift due to the
Doppler
effect occurs whenever a light source moves away from the
observer, corresponding to the Doppler shift that changes the
perceived frequency of
sound
waves. Although observing such redshifts, or complementary blue
shifts, has several terrestrial applications (e.g.,
Doppler
radar and
radar guns),
spectroscopic
astrophysics uses Doppler redshifts to determine the movement of
distant astronomical objects. This phenomenon was first predicted
and observed in the 19th century as scientists began to consider
the dynamical implications of the
wave-nature of
light.
Another cause of redshift is the
expansion of the universe, which explains the observation that
the redshifts of distant
galaxies,
quasars, and
intergalactic
gas clouds increase in
proportion to their distance from the earth. This mechanism is
a key feature of the
Big Bang model
of
physical
cosmology.
Gravitational
redshift is observed if the receiver is located at higher
gravitational
potential than the source. The cause of gravitational redshift
is the
time
dilation that occurs near massive objects, according to
general
relativity
All three of these phenomena, whose wide range of
instantiations are the focus of this article, can be understood
under the umbrella of frame transformation laws,
as described
below. There exist numerous other mechanisms with different
physical and mathematical descriptions that can lead to a shift in
the frequency of electromagnetic radiation and whose action is
generally not referred to as a "redshift", including
scattering and
optical
effects (for more see section on
physical optics and radiative transfer).
History
The history of the subject began with the
development in the 19th century of
wave
mechanics and the exploration of phenomena associated with the
Doppler
effect. The effect is named after
Christian
Andreas Doppler, who offered the first known physical
explanation for the phenomenon in 1842. The hypothesis was tested
and confirmed for
sound
waves by the
Dutch scientist
Christoph
Hendrik Diederik Buys Ballot in 1845. Doppler correctly
predicted that the phenomenon should apply to all
waves, and in particular suggested
that the varying
colors of
stars could be attributed
to their motion with respect to the Earth. While this attribution
turned out to be incorrect (stellar colors are indicators of a
star's
temperature,
not motion), Doppler would later be vindicated by verified redshift
observations.
The first Doppler redshift was described in 1848
by French physicist
Armand-Hippolyte-Louis
Fizeau, who pointed to the shift in
spectral
lines seen in stars as being due to the Doppler effect. The
effect is sometimes called the "Doppler-Fizeau effect". In 1868,
British astronomer
William
Huggins was the first to determine the velocity of a star
moving away from the Earth by this method.
In 1871, optical redshift was confirmed when the
phenomenon was observed in
Fraunhofer
lines using solar rotation, about 0.1 Å in the red. In 1901
Aristarkh Belopolsky verified optical redshift in the
laboratory using a system of rotating mirrors.
The earliest occurrence of the term "red-shift"
in print (in this hyphenated form), appears to be by American
astronomer
Walter S.
Adams in 1908, where he mentions "Two methods of investigating
that nature of the nebular red-shift". The word doesn't appear
unhyphenated, perhaps indicating a more common usage of its German
equivalent, Rotverschiebung, until about 1934 by
Willem de
Sitter.
Beginning with observations in 1912,
Vesto
Slipher discovered that most
spiral
nebulae had considerable redshifts. Subsequently,
Edwin Hubble
discovered an approximate relationship between the redshift of such
"nebulae" (now known to be
galaxies in their own right) and
the
distance to them
with the formulation of his eponymous
Hubble's
law. These observations corroborated
Alexander
Friedman's 1922 work, in which he derived the famous
Friedmann
equations. They are today considered strong evidence for an
expanding
universe and the
Big Bang
theory.
Measurement, characterization, and interpretation
The
spectrum
of light that comes from a single source (see idealized spectrum
illustration top-right) can be measured. To determine the redshift,
features in the spectrum such as
absorption
lines,
emission
lines, or other variations in
light
intensity, are searched for. If found, these features can be
compared with known features in the spectrum of various chemical
compounds found in experiments where that compound is located on
earth. A very common
atomic
element in space is
hydrogen. The spectrum of
originally featureless light shined through hydrogen will show a
signature
spectrum specific to hydrogen that has features at regular
intervals. If restricted to absorption lines it would look similar
to the illustration (top right). If the same pattern of intervals
is seen in an observed spectrum from a distant source but occurring
at shifted wavelengths, it can be identified as hydrogen too. If
the same spectral line is identified in both spectra but at
different wavelengths then the redshift can be calculated using the
table below. Determining the redshift of an object in this way
requires a frequency- or wavelength-range. In order to calculate
the redshift one has to know the wavelength of the emitted light in
the rest frame of the source, in other words, the wavelength that
would be measured by an observer located adjacent to and comoving
with the source. Since in astronomical applications this
measurement cannot be done directly, because that would require
travelling to the distant star of interest, the method using
spectral lines described here is used instead. Redshifts cannot be
calculated by looking at unidentified features whose rest-frame
frequency is unknown, or with a spectrum that is featureless or
white
noise (random fluctuations in a spectrum).
Redshift (and blue shift) may be characterized by
the relative difference between the observed and emitted
wavelengths (or frequency) of an object. In astronomy, it is
customary to refer to this change using a
dimensionless quantity
called z. If λ represents wavelength and f represents frequency
(note, λf = c where c is the
speed of
light), then z is defined by the equations:
After z is measured, the distinction between
redshift and blue shift is simply a matter of whether z is positive
or negative. See the
mechanisms
section below for some basic interpretations that follow when
either a redshift or blue shift is observed. For example,
Doppler
effect blue shifts (z < 0) are associated with objects
approaching (moving closer to) the observer with the light shifting
to greater
energies.
Conversely, Doppler effect redshifts (z > 0) are associated with
objects receding (moving away) from the observer with the light
shifting to lower energies. Likewise, gravitational blue shifts are
associated with light emitted from a source residing within a
weaker
gravitational
field observed within a stronger
gravitational
field, while gravitational redshifting implies the opposite
conditions.
Mechanisms
A single
photon propagated through a
vacuum can redshift in
several distinct ways. Each of these mechanisms produces a
Doppler-like redshift, meaning that z is independent of wavelength.
These mechanisms are described with
Galilean,
Lorentz,
or
general
relativistic transformations between one
frame of
reference and another.!! Definition |- align=center | Doppler
redshift ||
Galilean
transformation ||
Euclidean
metric || z = \frac |- align=center | Relativistic Doppler ||
Lorentz
transformation ||
Minkowski
metric || z = \left(1 + \frac\right) \gamma - 1 |- align=center
| Cosmological redshift ||
General
relativistic tr. ||
FRW metric ||
z = \frac - 1 |- align=center | Gravitational redshift ||
General
relativistic tr. ||
Schwarzschild
metric || z=\frac-1 |}
Doppler effect
If a source of the light is moving away from
an observer, then redshift (z > 0) occurs; if the source moves
towards the observer, then
blue shift (z
< 0) occurs. This is true for all electromagnetic waves and is
explained by the
Doppler
effect. Consequently, this type of redshift is called the
Doppler redshift. If the source moves away from the observer with
velocity v, then,
ignoring relativistic effects, the redshift is given by
- z \approx \frac (Since \gamma \approx 1,
see below)
where c is the
speed of
light. In the classical Doppler effect, the frequency of the
source is not modified, but the recessional motion causes the
illusion of a lower frequency.
Relativistic Doppler effect
A more complete treatment of
the Doppler redshift requires considering relativistic effects
associated with motion of sources close to the speed of light. A
complete derivation of the effect can be found in the article on
the
relativistic Doppler effect. In brief, objects moving close to
the speed of light will experience deviations from the above
formula due to the
time
dilation of
special
relativity which can be corrected for by introducing the
Lorentz
factor γ into the classical Doppler formula as follows:
- 1 + z = \left(1 + \frac\right) \gamma
This phenomenon was first observed in a 1938
experiment performed by Herbert E. Ives and G.R. Stilwell, called
the
Ives-Stilwell
experiment.
Since the Lorentz factor is dependent only on the
magnitude
of the velocity, this causes the redshift associated with the
relativistic correction to be independent of the orientation of the
source movement. In contrast, the classical part of the formula is
dependent on the
projection
of the movement of the source into the
line of
sight which yields different results for different
orientations. Consequently, for an object moving at an angle θ to
the observer (zero angle is directly away from the observer), the
full form for the relativistic Doppler effect becomes:
and for motion solely in the line of sight (θ =
0°), this equation reduces to:
For the special case that the source is moving at
right
angles (θ = 90°) to the detector, the relativistic redshift is
known as the
transverse
redshift, and a redshift:
is measured, even though the object is not moving
away from the observer. Even if the source is moving towards the
observer, if there is a transverse
component to the motion then
there is some speed at which the dilation just cancels the expected
blue shift and at higher speed the approaching source will be
redshifted.
Expansion of space
In the early part of the twentieth
century, Slipher, Hubble and others made the first measurements of
the redshifts and blue shifts of galaxies beyond the
Milky Way. They
initially interpreted these redshifts and blue shifts as due solely
to the Doppler effect, but later Hubble discovered a rough
correlation between the increasing redshifts and the increasing
distance of galaxies. Theorists almost immediately realized that
these observations could be explained by a different mechanism for
producing redshifts.
Hubble's law
of the correlation between redshifts and distances is required by
models of cosmology derived from general relativity that have a
metric expansion of space. This effect is prescribed by
the current cosmological model as an observable manifestation
of the time-dependent cosmic
scale
factor (a) in the following way:
This type of redshift is called the
cosmological
redshift or Hubble redshift. If the universe were contracting
instead of expanding, we would see distant galaxies blue shifted by
an amount proportional to their distance instead of
redshifted.
These galaxies are not receding simply by means
of a physical velocity in the direction away from the observer;
instead, the intervening space is stretching, which accounts for
the large-scale isotropy of the effect demanded by the
cosmological
principle. For cosmological redshifts of z < 0.1 the effects
of
spacetime expansion
are minimal and observed redshifts dominated by the peculiar
motions of the galaxies relative to one another that cause
additional Doppler redshifts and blue shifts. The difference
between physical velocity and space expansion can be illustrated by
the
Expanding Rubber Sheet Universe, a common cosmological analogy
used to describe the expansion of space. If two objects are
represented by ball bearings and spacetime by a stretching rubber
sheet, the Doppler effect is caused by rolling the balls across the
sheet to create peculiar motion. The cosmological redshift occurs
when the ball bearings are stuck to the sheet and the sheet is
stretched. (Obviously, there are dimensional problems with the
model, as the ball bearings should be in the sheet, and
cosmological redshift produces higher velocities than Doppler does
if the distance between two objects is large enough.)
In spite of the distinction between redshifts
caused by the velocity of objects and the redshifts associated with
the expanding universe, astronomers sometimes refer to "recession
velocity" in the context of the redshifting of distant galaxies
from the expansion of the Universe, even though it is only an
apparent recession. As a consequence, popular literature often uses
the expression "Doppler redshift" instead of "cosmological
redshift" to describe the motion of galaxies dominated by the
expansion of spacetime, despite the fact that a "cosmological
recessional speed" when calculated will not equal the velocity in
the relativistic Doppler equation. In particular, Doppler redshift
is bound by
special
relativity; thus v > c is impossible while, in contrast, v
> c is possible for cosmological redshift because the space
which separates the objects (e.g., a quasar from the Earth) can
expand faster than the speed of light. More mathematically, the
viewpoint that "distant galaxies are receding" and the viewpoint
that "the space between galaxies is expanding" are related by
changing
coordinate
systems. Expressing this precisely requires working with the
mathematics of the
Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric.
Gravitational redshift
In the theory of
general
relativity, there is time dilation within a gravitational well.
This is known as the
gravitational
redshift or Einstein Shift. The theoretical derivation of this
effect follows from the
Schwarzschild
solution of the
Einstein
equations which yields the following formula for redshift
associated with a photon traveling in the
gravitational
field of an
uncharged,
nonrotating,
spherically
symmetric mass:
This gravitational redshift result can be derived
from the assumptions of
special
relativity and the
equivalence
principle; the full theory of general relativity is not
required.
The effect is very small but measurable on Earth
using the
Mössbauer
effect and was first observed in the
Pound-Rebka
experiment. However, it is significant near a
black hole,
and as an object approaches the
event
horizon the red shift becomes infinite. It is also the dominant
cause of large angular-scale temperature fluctuations in the
cosmic microwave background radiation (see
Sachs-Wolfe
effect).
Observations in astronomy
The redshift observed in
astronomy can be measured because the
emission
and
absorption
spectra for
atoms are
distinctive and well known, calibrated from
spectroscopic experiments
in
laboratories on
Earth. When the redshift of various absorption and emission lines
from a single astronomical object is measured, z is found to be
remarkably constant. Although distant objects may be slightly
blurred and lines broadened, it is by no more than can be explained
by
thermal or
mechanical
motion of the source. For these reasons and others, the
consensus among astronomers is that the redshifts they observe are
due to some combination of the three established forms of
Doppler-like redshifts. Alternative hypotheses are not generally
considered plausible.
Spectroscopy, as a measurement, is considerably
more difficult than simple
photometry,
which measures the
brightness of astronomical
objects through certain
filters.
When photometric data is all that is available (for example, the
Hubble
Deep Field and the
Hubble
Ultra Deep Field), astronomers rely on a technique for
measuring
photometric
redshifts. Due to the filter being sensitive to a range of
wavelengths and the technique relying on making many assumptions
about the nature of the spectrum at the light-source,
errors
for these sorts of measurements can range up to δz = 0.5, and are
much less reliable than spectroscopic determinations. However,
photometry does allow at least for a qualitative characterization
of a redshift. For example, if a sun-like spectrum had a redshift
of z = 1, it would be brightest in the
infrared rather than at the
yellow-green color associated with the peak of its
blackbody
spectrum, and the light intensity will be reduced in the filter
by a factor of two (1+z) (see
K correction
for more details on the photometric consequences of
redshift).
Local observations
In nearby objects (within our
Milky Way
galaxy) observed redshifts are almost always related to the
line
of sight velocities associated with the objects being observed.
Observations of such redshifts and blue shifts have enabled
astronomers to measure
velocities and parametrize the
masses of the
orbiting stars in
spectroscopic binaries, a method first employed in 1868 by
British astronomer
William
Huggins. Measurements of redshifts to fine detail are used in
helioseismology
to determine the precise movements of the
photosphere of the
Sun. Redshifts have
also been used to make the first measurements of the
rotation
rates of
planets,
velocities of
interstellar
clouds, the
rotation
of galaxies, Additionally, the
temperatures of various
emitting and absorbing objects can be obtained by measuring
Doppler
broadening — effectively redshifts and blue shifts over a
single emission or absorption line. By measuring the broadening and
shifts of the 21-centimeter
hydrogen
line in different directions, astronomers have been able to
measure the
recessional
velocities of
interstellar
gas, which in turn reveals the
rotation
curve of our Milky Way.
The luminous point-like cores of
quasars were the first
"high-redshift" (z > 0.1) objects discovered before the
improvement of telescopes allowed for the discovery of other
high-redshift galaxies.
For galaxies more distant than the
Local Group
and the nearby
Virgo
Cluster, but within a thousand
megaparsecs or so, the redshift
is approximately proportional to the galaxy's distance. This
correlation was first observed by
Edwin Hubble
and has come to be known as
Hubble's
law.
Vesto
Slipher was the first to discover galactic redshifts, in about
the year 1912, while Hubble correlated Slipher's measurements with
distances he
measured
by other means to formulate his Law. In the widely accepted
cosmological model based on
general
relativity, redshift is mainly a result of the expansion of
space: this means that the farther away a galaxy is from us, the
more the space has expanded in the time since the light left that
galaxy, so the more the light has been stretched, the more
redshifted the light is, and so the faster it appears to be moving
away from us.
Hubble's law
follows in part from the
Copernican
principle. Because it is usually not known how
luminous objects are,
measuring the redshift is easier than more direct distance
measurements, so redshift is sometimes in practice converted to a
crude distance measurement using Hubble's law.
Gravitational
interactions of galaxies with each other and clusters cause a
significant
scatter in
the normal plot of the Hubble diagram. The
peculiar
velocities associated with galaxies superimpose a rough trace
of the
mass of
virialized
objects in the universe. This effect leads to such phenomena as
nearby galaxies (such as the
Andromeda
Galaxy) exhibiting blue shifts as we fall towards a common
barycenter, and
redshift maps of clusters showing a
Finger of
God effect due to the scatter of peculiar velocities in a
roughly spherical distribution. This added component gives
cosmologists a chance to measure the masses of objects independent
of the
mass
to light ratio (the ratio of a galaxy's mass in solar masses to
its brightness in solar luminosities), an important tool for
measuring
dark
matter.
The Hubble law's linear relationship between
distance and redshift assumes that the rate of expansion of the
universe is constant. However, when the universe was much younger,
the expansion rate, and thus the Hubble "constant", was larger than
it is today. For more distant galaxies, then, whose light has been
travelling to us for much longer times, the approximation of
constant expansion rate fails, and the Hubble law becomes a
non-linear integral relationship and dependent on the history of
the expansion rate since the emission of the light from the galaxy
in question. Observations of the redshift-distance relationship can
be used, then, to determine the expansion history of the universe
and thus the matter and energy content.
While it was long believed that the expansion
rate has been continuously decreasing since the Big Bang, recent
observations of the redshift-distance relationship using
Type Ia
supernovae have suggested that in comparatively recent times
the expansion rate of the universe has
begun
to accelerate.
Highest redshifts
Currently, the objects with the highest
known redshifts are galaxies. The most reliable redshifts are from
spectroscopic
data, and the highest confirmed
spectroscopic redshift of
a galaxy is that of
IOK-1, at a redshift
z = 6.96. Slightly less reliable are
Lyman-break
redshifts, the highest of which is the lensed galaxy A1689-zD1 at a
redshift z = 7.6 and the next highest being z=7.0 while as-yet
unconfirmed reports from a
gravitational
lens observed in a distant
galaxy cluster may indicate a galaxy with a redshift of
z=10.
The highest measured quasar redshift is z=6.4 .
The highest known redshift radio galaxy (TN J0924-2201) is at a
redshift z = 5.2 and the highest known redshift molecular material
is the detection of emission from the CO molecule from the quasar
SDSS J1148+5251 at z = 6.42
Redshift surveys
With the advent of automated
telescopes and improvements in
spectroscopes,
a number of collaborations have been made to map the universe in
redshift space. By combining redshift with angular position data, a
redshift survey maps the 3D distribution of matter within a field
of the sky. These observations are used to measure properties of
the
large-scale structure of the universe. The
Great
Wall, a vast
supercluster of galaxies
over 500 million
light-years
wide, provides a dramatic example of a large-scale structure that
redshift surveys can detect.
The first redshift survey was the
CfA
Redshift Survey, started in 1977 with the initial data
collection completed in 1982. More recently, the
2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey determined the large-scale structure
of one section of the Universe, measuring z-values for over 220,000
galaxies; data collection was completed in 2002, and the final
data set
was released
30 June 2003. (In addition to
mapping large-scale patterns of galaxies, 2dF established an upper
limit on
neutrino
mass.) Another notable investigation, the
Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), is ongoing as of 2005 and aims to
obtain measurements on around 100 million objects. SDSS has
recorded redshifts for galaxies as high as 0.4, and has been
involved in the detection of
quasars beyond z = 6. The
DEEP2 Redshift Survey uses the
Keck
telescopes with the new "DEIMOS"
spectrograph; a follow-up
to the pilot program DEEP1, DEEP2 is designed to measure faint
galaxies with redshifts 0.7 and above, and it is therefore planned
to provide a complement to SDSS and 2dF.
Effects due to physical optics or radiative transfer
The
interactions and phenomena summarized in the subjects of
radiative
transfer and
physical
optics can result in shifts in the wavelength and frequency of
electromagnetic radiation. In such cases the shifts correspond to a
physical energy transfer to matter or other photons rather than
being due to a transformation between reference frames. These
shifts can be due to such physical phenomena as
coherence
effects or the
scattering of
electromagnetic
radiation whether from
charged
elementary
particles, from particulates, or from fluctuations of the
index
of refraction in a
dielectric
medium as occurs in the radio phenomenon of
radio
whistlers. While such phenomena are sometimes referred to as
"redshifts" and "blue shifts", the physical interactions of the
electromagnetic radiation field with itself or intervening matter
distinguishes these phenomena from the reference-frame effects. In
astrophysics, light-matter interactions that result in energy
shifts in the radiation field are generally referred to as
"reddening" rather than "redshifting" which, as a term, is normally
reserved for the
effects discussed
above.
In many circumstances scattering causes radiation
to redden because
entropy results in the
predominance of many low-
energy photons over few
high-energy ones (while
conserving
total energy). Except possibly under carefully controlled
conditions, scattering does not produce the same relative change in
wavelength across the whole spectrum; that is, any calculated z is
generally a
function
of wavelength. Furthermore, scattering from
random media generally occurs at many
angles, and z is a
function of the scattering angle. If multiple scattering occurs, or
the scattering particles have relative motion, then there is
generally distortion of
spectral
lines as well.
In
interstellar
astronomy,
visible
spectra can appear
redder due to scattering processes
in a phenomenon referred to as
interstellar
reddening — similarly
Rayleigh
scattering causes the
atmospheric
reddening of the
Sun seen in the
sunrise or
sunset and causes the rest of the
sky to have a
blue color. This phenomenon is
distinct from redshifting because the
spectroscopic
lines are not shifted to other wavelengths in reddened objects
and there is an additional
dimming
and distortion associated with the phenomenon due to photons being
scattered in and out of the
line of
sight.
For a list of scattering processes, see
Scattering.
References
Notes
Articles
- Odenwald, S. & Fienberg, RT. 1993; "Galaxy Redshifts
Reconsidered" in Sky & Telescope Feb. 2003; pp31–35 (This
article is useful further reading in distinguishing between the 3
types of redshift and their causes.)
- Lineweaver, Charles H. and Tamara M. Davis, "Misconceptions
about the Big Bang", Scientific
American, March 2005. (This article is useful for explaining
the cosmological redshift mechanism as well as clearing up
misconceptions regarding the physics of the expansion of
space.)
Book references
- Galactic Astronomy
- An Introduction to Modern
Astrophysics
-
Feynman Lectures on Physics. Vol. 1
- Einstein's General Theory of
Relativity
- Astronomy: A Physical Perspective
- Gravitation
- Principles of Physical Cosmology
- Spacetime Physics: Introduction to Special
Relativity (2nd ed.)
- Gravitation and Cosmology
- See also physical
cosmology textbooks for applications of the cosmological and
gravitational redshifts.
redshift in Arabic: انزياح أحمر
redshift in Azerbaijani: Qırmızı
yerdəyişmə
redshift in Bengali: লোহিত সরণ
redshift in Bosnian: Crveni pomak
redshift in Bulgarian: Червено отместване
redshift in Catalan: Desplaçament cap al
roig
redshift in Czech: Rudý posuv
redshift in Danish: Rødforskydning
redshift in German: Rotverschiebung
redshift in Estonian: Punanihe
redshift in Spanish: Corrimiento al rojo
redshift in Esperanto: Ruĝenŝoviĝo
redshift in Persian: انتقال به سرخ
redshift in French: Décalage vers le rouge
redshift in Korean: 적색 편이
redshift in Croatian: Crveni pomak
redshift in Ido: Redesko
redshift in Indonesian: Pergeseran merah
redshift in Italian: Spostamento verso il
rosso
redshift in Hebrew: הסחה לאדום
redshift in Luxembourgish: Routverrécklung
redshift in Hungarian: Vöröseltolódás
redshift in Dutch: Roodverschuiving
redshift in Japanese: 赤方偏移
redshift in Norwegian: Rødforskyvning
redshift in Polish: Przesunięcie ku
czerwieni
redshift in Portuguese: Desvio para o
vermelho
redshift in Russian: Красное смещение
redshift in Sicilian: Spustamentu versu lu
russu
redshift in Simple English: Red shift
redshift in Slovak: Červený posun
redshift in Serbian: Црвени помак
redshift in Finnish: Punasiirtymä
redshift in Swedish: Rödförskjutning
redshift in Vietnamese: Dịch chuyển đỏ
redshift in Turkish: Kırmızıya kayma
redshift in Ukrainian: Червоний зсув
redshift in Chinese: 紅移