by observed redshift up to using parameters of the
Planck mission in the
standard model of cosmology. There are websites for calculating distances from redshift. Due to the broad wavelength ranges in photometric filters and the necessary assumptions about the nature of the spectrum at the light-source,
errors for these sorts of measurements can range up to , and are much less reliable than spectroscopic determinations. However, photometry does at least allow a qualitative characterisation of a redshift. For example, if a Sun-like spectrum had a redshift of , it would be brightest in the
infrared (1000 nm) rather than at the blue-green (500 nm) color associated with the peak of its
blackbody spectrum, and the light intensity will be reduced in the filter by a factor of four, . Both the photon count rate and the photon energy are redshifted. (See
K correction for more details on the photometric consequences of redshift.) Determining the redshift of an object with spectroscopy requires the wavelength of the emitted light in the rest frame of the source. Astronomical applications rely on distinct spectral lines. 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). Thus
gamma-ray bursts themselves cannot be used for reliable redshift measurements, but optical afterglow associated with the burst can be analysed for redshifts.
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 blueshifts enable astronomers to measure
velocities and parametrise the
masses of the
orbiting
stars in
spectroscopic binaries. Similarly, small redshifts and blueshifts detected in the spectroscopic measurements of individual stars are one way astronomers have been able to
diagnose and measure the presence and characteristics of
planetary systems around other stars and have even made very
detailed differential measurements of redshifts during
planetary transits to determine precise orbital parameters. Some approaches are able to track the redshift variations in multiple objects at once. Finely detailed measurements of redshifts 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, The
temperatures of various emitting and absorbing objects can be obtained by measuring
Doppler broadening—effectively redshifts and blueshifts 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. and 379,000 years after the initial moments of the
Big Bang. The luminous point-like cores of
quasars were the first "high-redshift" () 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 mega
parsecs 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 1912, while Hubble correlated Slipher's measurements with distances he
measured by other means to formulate his law. 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
virialised objects in the universe. This effect leads to such phenomena as nearby galaxies (such as the
Andromeda Galaxy) exhibiting blueshifts as we fall towards a common
barycenter, and redshift maps of clusters showing a
fingers of god effect due to the scatter of peculiar velocities in a roughly spherical distribution. These "redshift-space distortions" can be used as a cosmological probe in their own right, providing information on how structure formed in the universe, and how gravity behaves on large scales. 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. It was long believed that the expansion rate has been continuously decreasing since the Big Bang, but observations beginning in 1988 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 and
lookback time for the Planck 2018 cosmology parameters, from redshift 0 to 15, with distance (blue solid line) on the left axis, and time (orange dashed line) on the right. Note that the time that has passed (in billions of years) from a given redshift until now is not the same as the distance (in giga light years) light would have travelled from that redshift, due to the expansion of the universe over the intervening period. The most reliable redshifts are from
spectroscopic data, and the highest-confirmed spectroscopic redshift of a galaxy is that of
JADES-GS-z14-0 with a redshift of , corresponding to 290 million years after the Big Bang. The previous record was held by
GN-z11, and the next highest being . The most distant-observed
gamma-ray burst with a spectroscopic redshift measurement was
GRB 090423, which had a redshift of . The most distant-known quasar,
ULAS J1342+0928, is at . The highest-known redshift radio galaxy (TGSS1530) is at a redshift and the highest-known redshift molecular material is the detection of emission from the CO molecule from the quasar SDSS J1148+5251 at .
Extremely red objects (EROs) are
astronomical sources of radiation that radiate energy in the red and near infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum. These may be starburst galaxies that have a high redshift accompanied by reddening from intervening dust, or they could be highly redshifted elliptical galaxies with an older (and therefore redder) stellar population. Objects that are even redder than EROs are termed
hyper extremely red objects (HEROs). In June 2015, astronomers reported evidence for
Population III stars in the
Cosmos Redshift 7 galaxy at . Such stars are likely to have existed in the very early universe (i.e., at high redshift), and may have started the production of
chemical elements heavier than
hydrogen that are needed for the later formation of
planets and
life as we know it. Nonetheless, relic sources post far higher redshifts than even the furthest astronomical objects observed. The
cosmic microwave background has a redshift of , corresponding to an age of approximately 379,000 years after the Big Bang and a
proper distance of more than 46 billion light-years. This redshift corresponds to a shift in average temperature from 3000 K down to 3 K. The yet-to-be-observed first light from the oldest
Population III stars, not long after atoms first formed and the CMB ceased to be absorbed almost completely, may have redshifts in the range of . Other high-redshift events predicted by physics but not presently observable are the
cosmic neutrino background from about two seconds after the Big Bang (and a redshift in excess of ) and the cosmic
gravitational wave background emitted directly from
inflation at a redshift in excess of .
Redshift surveys With 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 redshifts for over 220,000 galaxies; data collection was completed in 2002, and the final
data set was released 30 June 2003. The
Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) began collecting data in 1998 and published its eighteenth data release in 2023. SSDS has measured redshifts for galaxies as high as 0.8, and has recorded over 100,000
quasars at and beyond. The
DEEP2 Redshift Survey used the
Keck telescopes with the "DEIMOS"
spectrograph; a follow-up to the pilot program DEEP1, DEEP2 was designed to measure faint galaxies with redshifts 0.7 and above, and it recorded redshifts of over 38,000 objects by its conclusion in 2013. ==Effects from physical optics or radiative transfer==