- Stebbins-Whitford effect
The Stebbins-Whitford effect refers to the excess reddening of the
spectra of elliptic galaxies as shown by measurements published byStebbins andWhitford In 1948. The spectra were shifted much more to the red than theHubble redshift could account for. Furthermore, this excess reddening increased with the distance of the galaxies. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=f6p0AFgzeMsC&pg=PA277&lpg=PA277&dq=stebbins+and+whitford+1948&source=web&ots=y84sNvRY2C&sig=bxBKjT5pmOhL3eOaye1A2Fb31g4&hl=en#PPA277,M1 Cosmology and Controversy] by Helge Kragh. Page 277.]The effect was only found for elliptical and not for spiral galaxies. One possible explanation was that younger galaxies contain more
red giant s than older galaxies. This kind of evolution could not exist according to thesteady-state theory . Later analysis of the same data showed that the data was inadequate to establish the claimed effect. After further measurements and analysis Whitford withdrew the claim in 1956.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.