No. A redshift means that the light has lost energy; one way for this to happens is if galaxies or other objects moveaway from us.
Until the object reaches it terminal velocity
redshift
Since Earth's surface is rotating toward the east, "fixed" celestial bodies appear to be moving toward the west.
Redshift does not expand the universe. Redshift is a physical quantity that is used to describe the expansion of the universe. The current time has a redshift of zero. at redshift 1, the universe was half the size it is now. At redshift 2, the universe was 1/3 the size it is now, and so on. if redshift is z, then (size of universe at redshift z)/(current size of universe)= 1/(z+1)
Redshift or blueshift is a change in the frequency of the light you receive, compared to the frequency at which it was emitted. A redshift is a reduction in frequency; this basically means that the object that emits the light is moving away from you.
The redshift that scientists speak of in stars, indicating that they are moving away, is complemented by a shift toward the blue in the spectrum by light moving toward a viewer.
That is called "redshift".That is called "redshift".That is called "redshift".That is called "redshift".
The Black Eye Galaxy [See Link] has a redshift of 0.001361, so it is moving away from us. Currently at 24 million light years from Earth
No. A redshift means that the light has lost energy; one way for this to happens is if galaxies or other objects moveaway from us.
Because Earth's gravitational pull is far greater than any gravitational pull possessed by humans..
Some nearby galaxies move towards us (blueshift), some move away from us (redshift). Galaxies that are farther away all move away from us (redshift); this means that the Universe is expanding.
No. It gets hotter.
gravity
disperse
An earthquake happens
if a planet was close to earth it would cause earthquakes and more. if it collided if earth depending on the size if it is big it will collide with earth.