- Fingers of God
Fingers of God is an effect in
observational cosmology that causes clusters of galaxies to be elongated inredshift space, with an axis of elongation pointed toward the observer. Jackson, J.C. (1972). "A critique of Rees's theory of primordial gravitational radiation". "Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society", 156, 1P-6P.] It is caused by aDoppler shift associated with the peculiar velocities of galaxies in a cluster. The large velocities that lead to this effect are associated with thegravity of the cluster by means of thevirial theorem ; they change the observed redshifts of the galaxies in the cluster. The deviation from theHubble's law relationship between distance and redshift is altered, and this leads to inaccurate distance measurements.The effect can be seen in the image to the right. The Earth is at the apex of the survey, on the left edge of the image; the individual "fingers", each one actually a cluster of galaxies all at the same distance, point towards it. At greater distances the fractional effect decreases as the peculiar velocities remain roughly constant, and the actual redshift increases. In a plot of "true" distance, instead of the displayed distance in the figure calculated from naïve application of Hubble's law, these fingers would be collapsed back to small spheres at the true cluster sites.
References
* [http://howdy.physics.nyu.edu/index.php/Red_Shift_Distortions NYU CCPP reference Wiki page]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.