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physics Physics is the scientific study of matter, its Elementary particle, fundamental constituents, its motion and behavior through space and time, and the related entities of energy and force. "Physical science is that department of knowledge whi ...
and
general relativity General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity, and as Einstein's theory of gravity, is the differential geometry, geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of grav ...
, gravitational redshift (known as Einstein shift in older literature) is the phenomenon that
electromagnetic waves In physics, electromagnetic radiation (EMR) is a self-propagating wave of the electromagnetic field that carries momentum and radiant energy through space. It encompasses a broad spectrum, classified by frequency or its inverse, wavelength, ran ...
or
photon A photon () is an elementary particle that is a quantum of the electromagnetic field, including electromagnetic radiation such as light and radio waves, and the force carrier for the electromagnetic force. Photons are massless particles that can ...
s travelling out of a gravitational well lose
energy Energy () is the physical quantity, quantitative physical property, property that is transferred to a physical body, body or to a physical system, recognizable in the performance of Work (thermodynamics), work and in the form of heat and l ...
. This loss of energy corresponds to a decrease in the wave
frequency Frequency is the number of occurrences of a repeating event per unit of time. Frequency is an important parameter used in science and engineering to specify the rate of oscillatory and vibratory phenomena, such as mechanical vibrations, audio ...
and increase in the
wavelength In physics and mathematics, wavelength or spatial period of a wave or periodic function is the distance over which the wave's shape repeats. In other words, it is the distance between consecutive corresponding points of the same ''phase (waves ...
, known more generally as a ''
redshift In physics, a redshift is an increase in the wavelength, and corresponding decrease in the frequency and photon energy, of electromagnetic radiation (such as light). The opposite change, a decrease in wavelength and increase in frequency and e ...
''. The opposite effect, in which photons gain energy when travelling into a gravitational well, is known as a gravitational blueshift (a type of '' blueshift''). The effect was first described by Einstein in 1907, eight years before his publication of the full theory of relativity. Gravitational redshift can be interpreted as a consequence of the
equivalence principle The equivalence principle is the hypothesis that the observed equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass is a consequence of nature. The weak form, known for centuries, relates to masses of any composition in free fall taking the same t ...
(that gravitational effects are locally equivalent to inertial effects and the redshift is caused by the Doppler effect) or as a consequence of the
mass–energy equivalence In physics, mass–energy equivalence is the relationship between mass and energy in a system's rest frame. The two differ only by a multiplicative constant and the units of measurement. The principle is described by the physicist Albert Einstei ...
and conservation of energy ('falling' photons gain energy), though there are numerous subtleties that complicate a rigorous derivation. A gravitational redshift can also equivalently be interpreted as gravitational time dilation at the source of the radiation: if two oscillators (attached to
transmitter In electronics and telecommunications, a radio transmitter or just transmitter (often abbreviated as XMTR or TX in technical documents) is an electronic device which produces radio waves with an antenna (radio), antenna with the purpose of sig ...
s producing electromagnetic radiation) are operating at different
gravitational potential In classical mechanics, the gravitational potential is a scalar potential associating with each point in space the work (energy transferred) per unit mass that would be needed to move an object to that point from a fixed reference point in the ...
s, the oscillator at the higher gravitational potential (farther from the attracting body) will tick faster; that is, when observed from the same location, it will have a higher measured frequency than the oscillator at the lower gravitational potential (closer to the attracting body). To first approximation, gravitational redshift is proportional to the difference in
gravitational potential In classical mechanics, the gravitational potential is a scalar potential associating with each point in space the work (energy transferred) per unit mass that would be needed to move an object to that point from a fixed reference point in the ...
divided by the
speed of light The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted , is a universal physical constant exactly equal to ). It is exact because, by international agreement, a metre is defined as the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time i ...
squared, z = \Delta U / c^2, thus resulting in a very small effect. Light escaping from the surface of the Sun was predicted by Einstein in 1911 to be redshifted by roughly 2 ppm or 2 × 10−6. Navigational signals from GPS satellites orbiting at altitude are perceived blueshifted by approximately 0.5 ppb or 5 × 10−10, corresponding to a (negligible) increase of less than 1 Hz in the frequency of a 1.5 GHz GPS radio signal (however, the accompanying gravitational time dilation affecting the atomic clock in the satellite ''is'' crucially important for accurate navigation). On the surface of the Earth the gravitational potential is proportional to height, \Delta U = g \Delta h, and the corresponding redshift is roughly 10−16 (0.1 parts per quadrillion) per meter of change in
elevation The elevation of a geographic location (geography), ''location'' is its height above or below a fixed reference point, most commonly a reference geoid, a mathematical model of the Earth's sea level as an equipotential gravitational equipotenti ...
and/or
altitude Altitude is a distance measurement, usually in the vertical or "up" direction, between a reference datum (geodesy), datum and a point or object. The exact definition and reference datum varies according to the context (e.g., aviation, geometr ...
. In
astronomy Astronomy is a natural science that studies celestial objects and the phenomena that occur in the cosmos. It uses mathematics, physics, and chemistry in order to explain their origin and their overall evolution. Objects of interest includ ...
, the magnitude of a gravitational redshift is often expressed as the velocity that would create an equivalent shift through the relativistic Doppler effect. In such units, the 2 ppm sunlight redshift corresponds to a 633 m/s receding velocity, roughly of the same magnitude as convective motions in the Sun, thus complicating the measurement. The GPS satellite gravitational blueshift velocity equivalent is less than 0.2 m/s, which is negligible compared to the actual Doppler shift resulting from its orbital velocity. In astronomical objects with strong gravitational fields the redshift can be much greater; for example, light from the surface of a
white dwarf A white dwarf is a Compact star, stellar core remnant composed mostly of electron-degenerate matter. A white dwarf is very density, dense: in an Earth sized volume, it packs a mass that is comparable to the Sun. No nuclear fusion takes place i ...
is gravitationally redshifted on average by around (50 km/s)/''c'' (around 170 ppm). Observing the gravitational redshift in the
Solar System The Solar SystemCapitalization of the name varies. The International Astronomical Union, the authoritative body regarding astronomical nomenclature, specifies capitalizing the names of all individual astronomical objects but uses mixed "Sola ...
is one of the classical tests of general relativity. Measuring the gravitational redshift to high precision with
atomic clock An atomic clock is a clock that measures time by monitoring the resonant frequency of atoms. It is based on atoms having different energy levels. Electron states in an atom are associated with different energy levels, and in transitions betwee ...
s can serve as a test of Lorentz symmetry and guide searches for
dark matter In astronomy, dark matter is an invisible and hypothetical form of matter that does not interact with light or other electromagnetic radiation. Dark matter is implied by gravity, gravitational effects that cannot be explained by general relat ...
.


Prediction by the equivalence principle and general relativity


Uniform gravitational field or acceleration

Einstein's theory of general relativity incorporates the
equivalence principle The equivalence principle is the hypothesis that the observed equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass is a consequence of nature. The weak form, known for centuries, relates to masses of any composition in free fall taking the same t ...
, which can be stated in various different ways. One such statement is that gravitational effects are locally undetectable for a free-falling observer. Therefore, in a laboratory experiment at the surface of the Earth, all gravitational effects should be equivalent to the effects that would have been observed if the laboratory had been accelerating through outer space at ''g''. One consequence is a gravitational Doppler effect. If a light pulse is emitted at the floor of the laboratory, then a free-falling observer says that by the time it reaches the ceiling, the ceiling has accelerated away from it, and therefore when observed by a detector fixed to the ceiling, it will be observed to have been Doppler shifted toward the red end of the spectrum. This shift, which the free-falling observer considers to be a kinematical Doppler shift, is thought of by the laboratory observer as a gravitational redshift. Such an effect was verified in the 1959 Pound–Rebka experiment. In a case such as this, where the gravitational field is uniform, the change in wavelength is given by : z = \frac\approx \frac, where \Delta y is the change in height. Since this prediction arises directly from the equivalence principle, it does not require any of the mathematical apparatus of general relativity, and its verification does not specifically support general relativity over any other theory that incorporates the equivalence principle. On Earth's surface (or in a spaceship accelerating at 1 ''g''), the gravitational redshift is approximately , the equivalent of a Doppler shift for every 1 m of altitude.


Spherically symmetric gravitational field

When the field is not uniform, the simplest and most useful case to consider is that of a spherically symmetric field. By Birkhoff's theorem, such a field is described in general relativity by the Schwarzschild metric, d\tau^2 = \left(1 - r_\text/R\right)dt^2 + \ldots, where d\tau is the clock time of an observer at distance ''R'' from the center, dt is the time measured by an observer at infinity, r_\text is the Schwarzschild radius 2GM/c^2, "..." represents terms that vanish if the observer is at rest, G is the Newtonian constant of gravitation, M the
mass Mass is an Intrinsic and extrinsic properties, intrinsic property of a physical body, body. It was traditionally believed to be related to the physical quantity, quantity of matter in a body, until the discovery of the atom and particle physi ...
of the gravitating body, and c the
speed of light The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted , is a universal physical constant exactly equal to ). It is exact because, by international agreement, a metre is defined as the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time i ...
. The result is that frequencies and wavelengths are shifted according to the ratio : 1 + z = \frac = \left(1 - \frac\right)^ where * \lambda_\infty\,is the wavelength of the light as measured by the observer at infinity, * \lambda_\text\, is the wavelength measured at the source of emission, and * R_\text is the radius at which the photon is emitted. This can be related to the redshift parameter conventionally defined as z = \lambda_\infty/\lambda_\text - 1. In the case where neither the emitter nor the observer is at infinity, the transitivity of Doppler shifts allows us to generalize the result to \lambda_1/\lambda_2 = \left left(1 - r_\text/R_1\right)/\left(1 - r_\text/R_2\right)\right. The redshift formula for the frequency \nu = c/\lambda is \nu_o/\nu_\text = \lambda_\text/\lambda_o. When R_1 - R_2 is small, these results are consistent with the equation given above based on the equivalence principle. The redshift ratio may also be expressed in terms of a (Newtonian) escape velocity v_\text at R_\text = 2GM/v_\text^2, resulting in the corresponding
Lorentz factor The Lorentz factor or Lorentz term (also known as the gamma factor) is a dimensionless quantity expressing how much the measurements of time, length, and other physical properties change for an object while it moves. The expression appears in sev ...
: : 1 + z = \gamma_\text = \frac. For an object compact enough to have an
event horizon In astrophysics, an event horizon is a boundary beyond which events cannot affect an outside observer. Wolfgang Rindler coined the term in the 1950s. In 1784, John Michell proposed that gravity can be strong enough in the vicinity of massive c ...
, the redshift is not defined for photons emitted inside the Schwarzschild radius, both because signals cannot escape from inside the horizon and because an object such as the emitter cannot be stationary inside the horizon, as was assumed above. Therefore, this formula only applies when R_\text is larger than r_\text. When the photon is emitted at a distance equal to the Schwarzschild radius, the redshift will be ''infinitely'' large, and it will not escape to ''any'' finite distance from the Schwarzschild sphere. When the photon is emitted at an infinitely large distance, there is no redshift.


Newtonian limit

In the Newtonian limit, i.e. when R_\text is sufficiently large compared to the Schwarzschild radius r_\text, the redshift can be approximated as : z = \frac \approx \frac\frac = \frac = \frac where g is the
gravitational acceleration In physics, gravitational acceleration is the acceleration of an object in free fall within a vacuum (and thus without experiencing drag (physics), drag). This is the steady gain in speed caused exclusively by gravitational attraction. All bodi ...
at R_\text. For Earth's surface with respect to infinity, ''z'' is approximately (the equivalent of a 0.2 m/s radial Doppler shift); for the Moon it is approximately (about 1 cm/s). The value for the surface of the Sun is about , corresponding to 0.64 km/s. (For non-relativistic velocities, the radial Doppler equivalent velocity can be approximated by multiplying ''z'' with the speed of light.) The z-value can be expressed succinctly in terms of the
escape velocity In celestial mechanics, escape velocity or escape speed is the minimum speed needed for an object to escape from contact with or orbit of a primary body, assuming: * Ballistic trajectory – no other forces are acting on the object, such as ...
at R_\text, since the
gravitational potential In classical mechanics, the gravitational potential is a scalar potential associating with each point in space the work (energy transferred) per unit mass that would be needed to move an object to that point from a fixed reference point in the ...
is equal to half the square of the
escape velocity In celestial mechanics, escape velocity or escape speed is the minimum speed needed for an object to escape from contact with or orbit of a primary body, assuming: * Ballistic trajectory – no other forces are acting on the object, such as ...
, thus: : z \approx \frac\left( \frac \right)^2 where v_\text is the escape velocity at R_\text. It can also be related to the circular orbit velocity v_\text at R_\text, which equals v_\text/\sqrt, thus : z \approx \left( \frac \right)^2. For example, the gravitational blueshift of distant starlight due to the Sun's gravity, which the Earth is orbiting at about 30 km/s, would be approximately 1 × 10−8 or the equivalent of a 3 m/s radial Doppler shift. For an object in a (circular) orbit, the gravitational redshift is of comparable magnitude as the transverse Doppler effect, z \approx \tfrac \beta^2 where , while both are much smaller than the radial Doppler effect, for which z \approx \beta.


Prediction of the Newtonian limit using the properties of photons

The formula for the gravitational red shift in the Newtonian limit can also be derived using the properties of a photon: In a gravitational field \vec a particle of mass m and velocity \vec changes it's energy E according to: : \frac = m \vec\cdot \vec = \vec\cdot\vec. For a massless photon described by its energy E = h \nu = \hbar \omega and momentum \vec = \hbar\vec this equation becomes after dividing by the Planck constant \hbar: : \frac = \vec\cdot \vec Inserting the gravitational field of a spherical body of mass M within the distance \vec : \vec = -G M \frac and the wave vector of a photon leaving the gravitational field in radial direction : \vec = \frac \frac the energy equation becomes : \frac = -\frac \frac. Using \mathrm dr = c \,\mathrm dt an ordinary differential equation which is only dependent on the radial distance r is obtained: : \frac = -\frac \frac For a photon starting at the surface of a spherical body with a Radius R_e with a frequency \omega_0 = 2 \pi \nu_0 the analytical solution is: : \frac = -\frac \frac \quad \Rightarrow \quad \omega(r) = \omega_0 \exp \left ( -\frac \left( \frac - \frac \right) \right) In a large distance from the body r \rightarrow \infty an observer measures the frequency : : \omega_\text = \omega_0 \exp \left ( -\frac \left( \frac \right) \right) \simeq \omega_0 \left( 1 - \frac + \frac \frac - \ldots \right). Therefore, the red shift is: : z = \frac = \frac = \frac In the linear approximation : z = \frac \simeq \frac \simeq \frac the Newtonian limit for the gravitational red shift of General Relativity is obtained.


History

The gravitational weakening of light from high-gravity stars was predicted by
John Michell John Michell (; 25 December 1724 – 21 April 1793) was an English natural philosopher and clergyman who provided pioneering insights into a wide range of scientific fields including astronomy, geology, optics, and gravitation. Considered "on ...
in 1783 and
Pierre-Simon Laplace Pierre-Simon, Marquis de Laplace (; ; 23 March 1749 – 5 March 1827) was a French polymath, a scholar whose work has been instrumental in the fields of physics, astronomy, mathematics, engineering, statistics, and philosophy. He summariz ...
in 1796, using
Isaac Newton Sir Isaac Newton () was an English polymath active as a mathematician, physicist, astronomer, alchemist, theologian, and author. Newton was a key figure in the Scientific Revolution and the Age of Enlightenment, Enlightenment that followed ...
's concept of light corpuscles (see: emission theory) and who predicted that some stars would have a gravity so strong that light would not be able to escape. The effect of gravity on light was then explored by Johann Georg von Soldner (1801), who calculated the amount of deflection of a light ray by the Sun, arriving at the Newtonian answer which is half the value predicted by
general relativity General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity, and as Einstein's theory of gravity, is the differential geometry, geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of grav ...
. All of this early work assumed that light could slow down and fall, which is inconsistent with the modern understanding of light waves. Einstein's 1917 paper on general relativity proposed three tests: the timing of the perihelion of Mercury, the bending of light around the Sun, and the shift in frequency of light emerging from a different gravitational potential, now called the gravitational redshift. Of these, the redshift proved difficult for physicist to understand and to measure convincingly. A confusing mix of complex and subtle issues plague even famous textbook descriptions of the phenomenon. Once it became accepted that light was an electromagnetic wave, it was clear that the frequency of light should not change from place to place, since waves from a source with a fixed frequency keep the same frequency everywhere. One way around this conclusion would be if time itself were altered if clocks at different points had different rates. This was precisely Einstein's conclusion in 1911. He considered an accelerating box, and noted that according to the special theory of relativity, the clock rate at the "bottom" of the box (the side away from the direction of acceleration) was slower than the clock rate at the "top" (the side toward the direction of acceleration). Indeed, in a frame moving (in x direction) with velocity v relative to the rest frame, the clocks at a nearby position dx are ahead by (dx/c)(v/c) (to the first order); so an acceleration g (that changes speed by g/dt per time dt) makes clocks at the position dx to be ahead by (dx/c)(g/c)dt, that is, tick at a rate : R=1+(g/c^2)dx The equivalence principle implies that this change in clock rate is the same whether the acceleration g is that of an accelerated frame without gravitational effects, or caused by a gravitational field in a stationary frame. Since acceleration due to gravitational potential V is -dV/dx, we get : = g/c^2 = - so – in weak fields – the change \Delta R in the clock rate is equal to -\Delta V/c^2. The changing rates of clocks allowed Einstein to conclude that light waves change frequency as they move, and the frequency/energy relationship for photons allowed him to see that this was best interpreted as the effect of the gravitational field on the mass–energy of the photon. To calculate the changes in frequency in a nearly static gravitational field, only the time component of the metric tensor is important, and the lowest order approximation is accurate enough for ordinary stars and planets, which are much bigger than their Schwarzschild radius.


Astronomical observations

A number of experimenters initially claimed to have identified the effect using astronomical measurements, and the effect was considered to have been finally identified in the spectral lines of the star Sirius B by W.S. Adams in 1925.Hetherington, N. S.
"Sirius B and the gravitational redshift - an historical review"
''Quarterly Journal Royal Astronomical Society'', vol. 21, Sept. 1980, pp. 246–252. Accessed 6 April 2017.
However, measurements by Adams have been criticized as being too lowHolberg, J. B.

''Journal for the History of Astronomy'', vol. 41, 1, 2010, pp. 41–64. Accessed 6 April 2017.
and these observations are now considered to be measurements of spectra that are unusable because of scattered light from the primary, Sirius A. The first accurate measurement of the gravitational redshift of a white dwarf was done by Popper in 1954, measuring a 21 km/s gravitational redshift of 40 Eridani B. The redshift of Sirius B was finally measured by Greenstein ''et al.'' in 1971, obtaining the value for the gravitational redshift of 89±16 km/s, with more accurate measurements by the Hubble Space Telescope, showing 80.4±4.8 km/s. James W. Brault, a graduate student of Robert Dicke at
Princeton University Princeton University is a private university, private Ivy League research university in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the List of Colonial ...
, measured the gravitational redshift of the sun using optical methods in 1962. In 2020, a team of scientists published the most accurate measurement of the solar gravitational redshift so far, made by analyzing Fe spectral lines in sunlight reflected by the Moon; their measurement of a mean global 638 ± 6 m/s lineshift is in agreement with the theoretical value of 633.1 m/s. Measuring the solar redshift is complicated by the Doppler shift caused by the motion of the Sun's surface, which is of similar magnitude as the gravitational effect. In 2011, the group of Radek Wojtak of the Niels Bohr Institute at the University of Copenhagen collected data from 8000 galaxy clusters and found that the light coming from the cluster centers tended to be red-shifted compared to the cluster edges, confirming the energy loss due to gravity. In 2018, the star S2 made its closest approach to Sgr A*, the 4-million solar mass
supermassive black hole A supermassive black hole (SMBH or sometimes SBH) is the largest type of black hole, with its mass being on the order of hundreds of thousands, or millions to billions, of times the mass of the Sun (). Black holes are a class of astronomical ...
at the centre of the
Milky Way The Milky Way or Milky Way Galaxy is the galaxy that includes the Solar System, with the name describing the #Appearance, galaxy's appearance from Earth: a hazy band of light seen in the night sky formed from stars in other arms of the galax ...
, reaching 7650 km/s or about 2.5% of the speed of light while passing the black hole at a distance of just 120 AU, or 1400 Schwarzschild radii. Independent analyses by the GRAVITY collaboration (led by Reinhard Genzel) and the KECK/UCLA Galactic Center Group (led by Andrea Ghez) revealed a combined transverse Doppler and gravitational redshift up to 200 km/s/c, in agreement with general relativity predictions. In 2021, Mediavilla ( IAC, Spain) & Jiménez-Vicente ( UGR, Spain) were able to use measurements of the gravitational redshift in
quasar A quasar ( ) is an extremely Luminosity, luminous active galactic nucleus (AGN). It is sometimes known as a quasi-stellar object, abbreviated QSO. The emission from an AGN is powered by accretion onto a supermassive black hole with a mass rangi ...
s up to cosmological redshift of to confirm the predictions of Einstein's equivalence principle and the lack of cosmological evolution within 13%. In 2024, Padilla et al. have estimated the gravitational redshifts of supermassive black holes (SMBH) in eight thousand quasars and one hundred Seyfert type 1 galaxies from the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of their emission lines, finding , compatible with SMBHs of ~ 1 billion solar masses and broadline regions of ~ 1 parsec radius. This same gravitational redshift was directly measured by these authors in the SAMI sample of LINER galaxies, using the redshift differences between lines emitted in central and outer regions.


Terrestrial tests

Between 1925 and 1955, very few attempts were made to measure the gravitational redshift. The effect is now considered to have been definitively verified by the experiments of Pound, Rebka and Snider between 1959 and 1965. The Pound–Rebka experiment of 1959 measured the gravitational redshift in spectral lines using a terrestrial 57Fe
gamma Gamma (; uppercase , lowercase ; ) is the third letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 3. In Ancient Greek, the letter gamma represented a voiced velar stop . In Modern Greek, this letter normally repr ...
source over a vertical height of 22.5 metres. This paper was the first determination of the gravitational redshift which used measurements of the change in wavelength of gamma-ray photons generated with the Mössbauer effect, which generates radiation with a very narrow line width. The accuracy of the gamma-ray measurements was typically 1%. An improved experiment was done by Pound and Snider in 1965, with an accuracy better than the 1% level. A very accurate gravitational redshift experiment was performed in 1976, where a
hydrogen Hydrogen is a chemical element; it has chemical symbol, symbol H and atomic number 1. It is the lightest and abundance of the chemical elements, most abundant chemical element in the universe, constituting about 75% of all baryon, normal matter ...
maser clock on a rocket was launched to a height of , and its rate compared with an identical clock on the ground. It tested the gravitational redshift to 0.007%. Later tests can be done with the
Global Positioning System The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a satellite-based hyperbolic navigation system owned by the United States Space Force and operated by Mission Delta 31. It is one of the global navigation satellite systems (GNSS) that provide ge ...
(GPS), which must account for the gravitational redshift in its timing system, and physicists have analyzed timing data from the GPS to confirm other tests. When the first satellite was launched, it showed the predicted shift of 38 microseconds per day. This rate of the discrepancy is sufficient to substantially impair the function of GPS within hours if not accounted for. An excellent account of the role played by general relativity in the design of GPS can be found in Ashby 2003. In 2010, an experiment placed two aluminum-ion quantum clocks close to each other, but with the second elevated 33 cm compared to the first, making the gravitational red shift effect visible in everyday lab scales. In 2020, a group at the
University of Tokyo The University of Tokyo (, abbreviated as in Japanese and UTokyo in English) is a public research university in Bunkyō, Tokyo, Japan. Founded in 1877 as the nation's first modern university by the merger of several pre-westernisation era ins ...
measured the gravitational redshift of two strontium-87 optical lattice clocks. The measurement took place at Tokyo Skytree where the clocks were separated by approximately 450 m and connected by telecom fibers. The gravitational redshift can be expressed as : z = \frac = (1+\alpha)\frac , where \Delta\nu=\nu_-\nu_ is the gravitational redshift, \nu_ is the optical clock transition frequency, \Delta U= U_- U_ is the difference in gravitational potential, and \alpha denotes the violation from general relativity. By Ramsey spectroscopy of the strontium-87 optical clock transition (429 THz, 698 nm) the group determined the gravitational redshift between the two optical clocks to be 21.18 Hz, corresponding to a ''z''-value of approximately 5 × 10−14. Their measured value of \alpha, (1.4 \pm 9.1)\times 10^ , is an agreement with recent measurements made with hydrogen masers in elliptical orbits. In October 2021, a group at JILA led by physicist Jun Ye reported a measurement of gravitational redshift in the submillimeter scale. The measurement is done on the 87Sr clock transition between the top and the bottom of a millimeter-tall ultracold cloud of 100,000
strontium Strontium is a chemical element; it has symbol Sr and atomic number 38. An alkaline earth metal, it is a soft silver-white yellowish metallic element that is highly chemically reactive. The metal forms a dark oxide layer when it is exposed to ...
atoms in an optical lattice.


See also

*
Tests of general relativity Tests of general relativity serve to establish observational evidence for the theory of general relativity. The first three tests, proposed by Albert Einstein in 1915, concerned the "anomalous" precession of the perihelion of Mercury (planet), Me ...
*
Equivalence principle The equivalence principle is the hypothesis that the observed equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass is a consequence of nature. The weak form, known for centuries, relates to masses of any composition in free fall taking the same t ...
* Gravitational time dilation *
Redshift In physics, a redshift is an increase in the wavelength, and corresponding decrease in the frequency and photon energy, of electromagnetic radiation (such as light). The opposite change, a decrease in wavelength and increase in frequency and e ...
* (redshifting of gravitational waves due to speed or cosmic expansion)


Citations


References


Primary sources

* * * * Albert Einstein, "Relativity: the Special and General Theory". (@Project Gutenberg). * * *


Other sources

* {{Authority control Albert Einstein Effects of gravity