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By the end of this section, you will be able to:
  • Explain the origin of the shift in frequency and wavelength of the observed wavelength when observer and source moved toward or away from each other
  • Derive an expression for the relativistic Doppler shift
  • Apply the Doppler shift equations to real-world examples

As discussed in the chapter on sound, if a source of sound and a listener are moving farther apart, the listener encounters fewer cycles of a wave in each second, and therefore lower frequency, than if their separation remains constant. For the same reason, the listener detects a higher frequency if the source and listener are getting closer. The resulting Doppler shift in detected frequency occurs for any form of wave. For sound waves, however, the equations for the Doppler shift differ markedly depending on whether it is the source, the observer, or the air, which is moving. Light requires no medium, and the Doppler shift for light traveling in vacuum depends only on the relative speed of the observer and source.

The relativistic doppler effect

Suppose an observer in S sees light from a source in S moving away at velocity v ( [link] ). The wavelength of the light could be measured within S —for example, by using a mirror to set up standing waves and measuring the distance between nodes. These distances are proper lengths with S as their rest frame, and change by a factor 1 v 2 / c 2 when measured in the observer’s frame S , where the ruler measuring the wavelength in S is seen as moving.

In figure a: An observer is shown at the origin of a stationary frame S. The S prime frame is moving to the right with velocity v relative to frame S. A source at the origin of S prime is shown emitting a sinusoidal wave that propagates to the left. In figure b, six cycles of the wave are shown as seen by the observer and as seen by the source. The wavelength of the wave seen by the observer is longer than that of the wave seen by the source. The width of the six cycles as seen by the source is labeled as c delta t. The extra length to the end of the six cycles as seen by the observer is labeled as v delta t.
(a) When a light wave is emitted by a source fixed in the moving inertial frame S , the observer in S sees the wavelength measured in S . to be shorter by a factor 1 v 2 / c 2 . (b) Because the observer sees the source moving away within S , the wave pattern reaching the observer in S is also stretched by the factor ( c Δ t + v Δ t ) / ( c Δ t ) = 1 + v / c .

If the source were stationary in S , the observer would see a length c Δ t of the wave pattern in time Δ t . But because of the motion of S relative to S , considered solely within S , the observer sees the wave pattern, and therefore the wavelength, stretched out by a factor of

c Δ t period + v Δ t period c Δ t period = 1 + v c

as illustrated in (b) of [link] . The overall increase from both effects gives

λ obs = λ src ( 1 + v c ) 1 1 v 2 c 2 = λ src ( 1 + v c ) 1 ( 1 + v c ) ( 1 v c ) = λ src ( 1 + v c ) ( 1 v c )

where λ src is the wavelength of the light seen by the source in S and λ obs is the wavelength that the observer detects within S .

Red shifts and blue shifts

The observed wavelength λ obs of electromagnetic radiation is longer (called a “red shift”) than that emitted by the source when the source moves away from the observer. Similarly, the wavelength is shorter (called a “blue shift”) when the source moves toward the observer. The amount of change is determined by

λ obs = λ s 1 + v c 1 v c

where λ s is the wavelength in the frame of reference of the source, and v is the relative velocity of the two frames S and S . The velocity v is positive for motion away from an observer and negative for motion toward an observer. In terms of source frequency and observed frequency, this equation can be written as

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 3. OpenStax CNX. Nov 04, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12067/1.4
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