This work examines how environmental gravitational potentials may introduce systematic bias in cosmological redshift measurements. Within the framework of general relativity, clocks run slower in deeper gravitational potentials due to the lapse function. When comparing signals from distant emitters to local observers, this effect contributes a gravitational redshift component that is not accounted for in standard FLRW interpretations. We decompose the observed redshift into cosmological, peculiar, and environmental gravitational components, and estimate the magnitude of the environmental term using typical cluster-scale potentials (/c² 10^-5). A simple statistical model linking environmental redshift to local galaxy density (z₄₍ₕ = g) is proposed, leading to testable predictions: correlation between supernova residuals and galaxy density, environmental dependence of H₀, and consistency between galaxy rotation curve potentials and large-scale structure. The framework introduces no new physics or modifications to Einstein's equations; it merely examines the operational consequences of comparing clocks in different gravitational environments. This perspective complements existing work on inhomogeneous cosmologies and backreaction, offering a distinct observational pathway to investigate environmental effects in precision cosmology.
Emamifar et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: