Effect of acceleration on shape and size of a light wave front

In summary, the conversation centers around the twins paradox and the question of how the twins can agree on the final location and geometry of a light wave front after being reunited. The thread at SciForums.com discusses different perspectives and theories, including the use of inertial frames and differential aging to calculate the radius of the wave front. The use of the definition from Dolby and Gull is also mentioned as a way to determine the radius in a non-inertial frame. Ultimately, it is agreed that the twins must agree on the same geometry, but may disagree on the specific radius due to frame variance.
  • #1
MikeLizzi
239
6
Sometimes I get frustrated with the dialogs in this forum because there are so many misunderstandings and outright half truths being passed around (including from myself). Well, I was just over at SciForums.com warily participating in the thread “According to SR…” and it gave me a whole new perspective on frustration.

The subject of the thread at SciForums.com is quite interesting. I hope I am not violating the rules by introducing it here. Summarized, it goes something like this.

“Suppose that a flash of light is emitted from Earth at the start of the Twins problem when t=t’=0. Since the Earth twin is modeled as inertial, that twin would always calculate the geometry of the light wave front to be a sphere of radius ct where t is the elapsed time on the Earth twin’s clock. Now the astronaut has been calculating the location and geometry of the light wave front too (which is different during the trip). At the end of the problem, the twins are reunited and must agree on the final location and geometry of the light wave front. But the elapsed time on the astronaut clock is t’ < t. So, how can the astronaut calculate the same final radius for the light wave front?”

P.S. Over at SciForums.com, I referenced a very good and relevant thread from this forum titled “Accelerated Frames in SR” but only one of the many participants got it.
 
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  • #2
MikeLizzi said:
At the end of the problem, the twins are reunited and must agree on the final location and geometry of the light wave front. But the elapsed time on the astronaut clock is t’ < t. So, how can the astronaut calculate the same final radius for the light wave front?
It is not correct that they must agree on the same final radius. They only need to agree that it is a sphere and that it propagated at c in any inertial frame. They can disagree about the radius just as they can disagree on the time.

Also, note that the second postulate refers to inertial frames. There are three relevant inertial frames in this problem, and the light cone has the appropriate geometry in each, and each matching the elapsed time in their frame but not the elapsed time in the other frames.

The traveling twin's frame is non-inertial, so it is not uniquely defined. However, if you use the definition from Dolby and Gull (http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0104077) then it will be a sphere of a radius matching the traveller's time in the non-inertial frame also. That is not necessarily the case with other defintions of the frame of a non-inertial observer.
 
  • #3
DaleSpam said:
It is not correct that they must agree on the same final radius. They only need to agree that it is a sphere and that it propagated at c in any inertial frame. They can disagree about the radius just as they can disagree on the time.

Also, note that the second postulate refers to inertial frames. There are three relevant inertial frames in this problem, and the light cone has the appropriate geometry in each, and each matching the elapsed time in their frame but not the elapsed time in the other frames.

The traveling twin's frame is non-inertial, so it is not uniquely defined. However, if you use the definition from Dolby and Gull (http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0104077) then it will be a sphere of a radius matching the traveller's time in the non-inertial frame also. That is not necessarily the case with other defintions of the frame of a non-inertial observer.

Here we go again.
Think about it DaleSpam. At the end of the problem the twins are coincident in the same inertial reference frame. While their clocks don't agree, they must agree on the geometry of everything in the universe from that point forward.
 
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  • #4
MikeLizzi said:
they must agree on the geometry of everything in the universe
For geometrical quantities that are frame-variant, such as the radius, that is only true if they measure those quantities with respect to the same reference frame. And if they do, then they agree, regardless of which reference frame they use, as long as it is the same.
 
  • #5
MikeLizzi said:
At the end of the problem, the twins are reunited and must agree on the final location and geometry of the light wave front. But the elapsed time on the astronaut clock is t’ < t. So, how can the astronaut calculate the same final radius for the light wave front?”
Easy, he must calculate his differential time dilation due to his acceleration and change in directions. See for instance Minguzzi's papers on differential aging.
 
  • #6
DaleSpam said:
For geometrical quantities that are frame-variant, such as the radius, that is only true if they measure those quantities with respect to the same reference frame. And if they do, then they agree, regardless of which reference frame they use, as long as it is the same.

That's what I said in the original post. That's the problem. When the twins have reunited they are in the same reference frame. They must now agree on the geometry of the wave front. The Earth twin can make the simple calculation that the radius of the wavefront is ct where t is the elapsed time of the Earth twin's clock. But if the astronaut tries to do that using the time elapsed on his clock he will get a different answer. His calculation must produce the same answer.
 
  • #7
Passionflower said:
Easy, he must calculate his differential time dilation due to his acceleration and change in directions. See for instance Minguzzi's papers on differential aging.

I'm not sure you understand the problem I posted. The problem is not how to calculate differential aging.
 
  • #8
MikeLizzi said:
I'm not sure you understand the problem I posted. The problem is not how to calculate differential aging.
It is because the if you know the amount of differential aging you can calculate the actual radius of the wavefront.
 
  • #9
Passionflower said:
It is because the if you know the amount of differential aging you can calculate the actual radius of the wavefront.

The point of the post is that the twins have not aged the same and if each uses the amount they aged to calculate the radius of the wavefront, it appears to give them different results.
 
  • #10
MikeLizzi said:
The point of the post is that the twins have not aged the same and if each uses the amount they aged to calculate the radius of the wavefront, it appears to give them different results.
Thee is no difference when we account for the differential aging.

So what is the issue or question here or is this perhaps some attempt to 'disprove' relativity?
 
  • #11
MikeLizzi said:
That's what I said in the original post. That's the problem. When the twins have reunited they are in the same reference frame. They must now agree on the geometry of the wave front. The Earth twin can make the simple calculation that the radius of the wavefront is ct where t is the elapsed time of the Earth twin's clock. But if the astronaut tries to do that using the time elapsed on his clock he will get a different answer. His calculation must produce the same answer.

Ah, back to this misleading concept of necessarily being 'in a frame'. I am on earth, but I can compute (and will compute for planetary problems) in the sun's frame. If I compute planetary motion in an Earth centered frame, I am in for a heap of complications (forget GR, and even SR, just imagine Newtonian gravity and Galilean relativity for this analogy).

When the astronaut returns, if he wants to compute using Earth's frame, he must use Earth's time. If you insist that he use his own watch time, he must use a coherent coordinate chart that maps spacetime (past and ongoing), and has a coordinate time matching his watch time. There is no unique such coordinate system, but there are any number of choices (all much more complex than just choosing one inertial frame). Whichever one he picks, he will continue to label times and distances of events differently than the earthbound twin (as long as he insists on using his watch time, which is influenced by his history of deviation from inertial motion).
 
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  • #12
PAllen said:
Ah, back to this misleading concept of necessarily being 'in a frame'.

Getting close.


PAllen said:
When the astronaut returns, if he wants to compute using Earth's frame, he must use Earth's time.


Of course if the astronaut uses the Earth twins data he will get the Earth twins answer.

The issue, which I may not have explicitly stated, is how does the astronaut use his own data to get the answer?

He can and if he does it right he will get the same answer as using the Earth twins data. Knowing how to do that is the key. I referenced a post in this very forum that explains how that would be done.
 
  • #13
Passionflower said:
Thee is no difference when we account for the differential aging.

So what is the issue or question here or is this perhaps some attempt to 'disprove' relativity?

I'm not trying to disprove relativity. If anything I'm trying to prove that most of the members of this forum don't know as much as they think they know. (And I'm not averse to someone saying that statement also applys to me)

You state there is no difference when we account for differential aging. So show me how each twin would calculate the radius of the light sphere using their own data and get the same answer.
 
  • #14
MikeLizzi said:
The issue, which I may not have explicitly stated, is how does the astronaut use his own data to get the answer?

He can and if he does it right he will get the same answer as using the Earth twins data. Knowing how to do that is the key. I referenced a post in this very forum that explains how that would be done.

You didn't link to anything. I am not going to search for some thread by name, and search for which posts you are referring to.

I insist there is no unique, preferred answer to your question. Are you claiming there is only one coordinate system the astronaut is allowed to use? I have little interest in finding a particular coordinate system in which a particular light sphere has the same radius as for a particular inertial frame (note, different inertial frames may disagree on the radius of a particular light sphere; note, even meeting these constraints, it is trivially provable there are infinite possible such coordinate systems). Why not? Because I think it is very silly in SR to do anything more complex than pick some convenient inertial frame, relate measurements to it, and do all computations in that chosen frame.

[Edit: One very well known feature of non-inertial coordinates is that light speed is not constant. Thus, there is really no mystery in how a well chosen such coordinate system could get the desired agreement : proper time slower, light faster, same radius. I remain uninterested in the details of such an exercise.]
 
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  • #15
MikeLizzi said:
You state there is no difference when we account for differential aging. So show me how each twin would calculate the radius of the light sphere using their own data and get the same answer.
It is trivial as the radius is simply delta t times c for an inertial observer. The traveler can calculate how much his watch ran slower and when he takes that into account he gets the same answer.

I think you ask questions about something that you think is a problem but what is not a problem at all.
 
  • #16
MikeLizzi said:
You state there is no difference when we account for differential aging. So show me how each twin would calculate the radius of the light sphere using their own data and get the same answer.

I thought Passionflower was perfectly clear about his method. Track your differential aging relative to Earth twin (which can be done with only local measurements, as explained in the papers he referenced). Take your clock time, adjust for differential time, multiply by c; that is the radius you compute. You would get the same radius as earthbound twin at all points in your journey with this method.
 
  • #17
PAllen said:
I thought Passionflower was perfectly clear about his method. Track your differential aging relative to Earth twin (which can be done with only local measurements, as explained in the papers he referenced). Take your clock time, adjust for differential time, multiply by c; that is the radius you compute. You would get the same radius as earthbound twin at all points in your journey with this method.

That's just another way of saying the astronaut should transform his observations to that of the Earth twin and then make the calculations. If this were a test that would be a great way to get the right answer. But a solution like that means the poster doesn't know how to calculate the right answer using the astronauts observations.

So far no one who has responded does. No crime there, I don't know how to do it myself. But I know it can be done. User "pervect" pointed the way in his post in this thread:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=181421
 
  • #18
MikeLizzi said:
That's just another way of saying the astronaut should transform his observations to that of the Earth twin and then make the calculations. If this were a test that would be a great way to get the right answer. But a solution like that means the poster doesn't know how to calculate the right answer using the astronauts observations.

So far no one who has responded does. No crime there, I don't know how to do it myself. But I know it can be done. User "pervect" pointed the way in his post in this thread:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=181421

I believe, given time, I could demonstrate many ways of doing it, but I have explained why I (and I think most anyone working in SR) would find the effort silly to expend. Doing all calculations in some convenient inertial frame is what essentially everyone does, in practice, in SR. Why do you want to make something simple seem complicated?

[Edit: Pervect is just discussing Rindler coordinates, which apply to uniform acceleration. One analog to these coordinates for a rocket path where you start at rest, accelerate away, then back, ending at rest, would be Fermi-normal coordinates. Another, as Dalespam mentioned, would be radar coordinates. Another coordinate system could be built from the Minguzzi simultaneity, as Passionfower referenced. If you used Fermi-Normal coordinates, you would find that, on return, distance to light sphere agrees with stay at home, but average light speed is greater, balancing the smaller proper time experienced. Dalespam already explained what you would get with Radar coordinates. There is no sense in which you can call one of these answers right and one wrong. I want to re-emphasize Dalespam's point that your whole expectation of what should be true is wrong for non-inertial coordinates in SR.

I don't believe it makes much sense to talk about non-inertial frames (rather than coordinates), except locally. The issue is the same as in GR. Specifically, there is a unique, simplest type of global coordinate system for each inertial frame in SR. For non-inertial frames, this is false, as it is, in general, in GR. Thus, it is clearer to treat frames as strictly local for non inertial motion, or quite generally, in GR.]
 
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  • #19
MikeLizzi said:
When the twins have reunited they are in the same reference frame.
I really dislike this terminology. They are always "in" every reference frame. When the twins have reunited they are at rest wrt the same reference frame.

MikeLizzi said:
They must now agree on the geometry of the wave front.
They must ALWAYS agree on the geometry of the wave front and all other geometrical properties, both before and after the reuinion, provided that they use the same reference frame to calculate any frame variant quantities like the radius.

MikeLizzi said:
The Earth twin can make the simple calculation that the radius of the wavefront is ct where t is the elapsed time of the Earth twin's clock. But if the astronaut tries to do that using the time elapsed on his clock he will get a different answer. His calculation must produce the same answer.
No, in fact, it must not produce the same answer, in that reference frame his clock has undergone significant time dilation, so the sphere must be larger than c times the time shown on his clock.

The principle of relativity states that the mathematical form of the laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames, it does not state that astronauts who make mistakes in calculations should nevertheless get the right answer. The laws of physics say that his clock ran slow while he was traveling and so his clock is not so simply related to the size of the light sphere in the Earth frame.
 
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  • #20
MikeLizzi said:
“Suppose that a flash of light is emitted from Earth at the start of the Twins problem when t=t’=0. Since the Earth twin is modeled as inertial, that twin would always calculate the geometry of the light wave front to be a sphere of radius ct where t is the elapsed time on the Earth twin’s clock. Now the astronaut has been calculating the location and geometry of the light wave front too (which is different during the trip). At the end of the problem, the twins are reunited and must agree on the final location and geometry of the light wave front. But the elapsed time on the astronaut clock is t’ < t. So, how can the astronaut calculate the same final radius for the light wave front?”
In the standard, simple version of the twins' paradox there are 3 inertial frames (the Earth frame, the outgoing astronaut frame and the ingoing astronaut frame). Just before the astronaut reaches the turning point, the astronaut's clock is at ½t' and in the outgoing astronaut inertial frame the sphere radius is ½ct'. When we transform to the ingoing astronaut inertial frame, we synchronise the frame clocks with the astronaut's ½t', but because of the relativity of simultaneity, the original light flash did not occur at time zero in this frame but at some earlier time, so the sphere radius in this frame is more than ½ct'. (It will actually be c(t−½t').) By the time the astronaut is back at Earth, a further time of ½t' will have passed on his clock and the sphere radius will have expanded to ct.
 
  • #21
DrGreg said:
In the standard, simple version of the twins' paradox there are 3 inertial frames (the Earth frame, the outgoing astronaut frame and the ingoing astronaut frame). Just before the astronaut reaches the turning point, the astronaut's clock is at ½t' and in the outgoing astronaut inertial frame the sphere radius is ½ct'. When we transform to the ingoing astronaut inertial frame, we synchronise the frame clocks with the astronaut's ½t', but because of the relativity of simultaneity, the original light flash did not occur at time zero in this frame but at some earlier time, so the sphere radius in this frame is more than ½ct'. (It will actually be c(t−½t').) By the time the astronaut is back at Earth, a further time of ½t' will have passed on his clock and the sphere radius will have expanded to ct.

Thank you Dr Greg. I can use that analysis. I expect you will receive a critical comment from DaleSpam since in his last post he insisted that the the twins would not produce the same answer. I'll leave that fight for you.
 
  • #22
DaleSpam said:
I really dislike this terminology. They are always "in" every reference frame. When the twins have reunited they are at rest wrt the same reference frame.

They must ALWAYS agree on the geometry of the wave front and all other geometrical properties, both before and after the reuinion, provided that they use the same reference frame to calculate any frame variant quantities like the radius.

No, in fact, it must not produce the same answer, in that reference frame his clock has undergone significant time dilation, so the sphere must be larger than c times the time shown on his clock.

The principle of relativity states that the mathematical form of the laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames, it does not state that astronauts who make mistakes in calculations should nevertheless get the right answer. The laws of physics say that his clock ran slow while he was traveling and so his clock is not so simply related to the size of the light sphere in the Earth frame.

A series of straw man arguments an just plain wrong physics. Not worth another reply. But Dr Greg might have something to say to you.
 
  • #23
MikeLizzi said:
A series of straw man arguments an just plain wrong physics. Not worth another reply.
If you don't want to reply that is fine, but nothing in my post was wrong. Frame variant quantitites need to be calculated in the same frame, and regardless of which frame you pick, the twins will agree on the radius if they apply the laws of physics.
 
  • #24
MikeLizzi said:
A series of straw man arguments an just plain wrong physics. Not worth another reply. But Dr Greg might have something to say to you.

Actually, though you may not understand or accept it, the answers you've been given by Dalespam, Passionflower, Dr. Greg, and myself are all consistent and correct. The key point is that there is no unique answer to 'correct coordinates for an accelerating observer'. Note also, that Dr. Greg's recipe is, in fact, Fermi-Normal coordinates applied to a discontinuous trajectory, and if the turnaround is smoothed slightly, involves arbitrarily large light speed for a brief period, as I described.
 
  • #25
MikeLizzi said:
A series of straw man arguments an just plain wrong physics. Not worth another reply. But Dr Greg might have something to say to you.

While anyone can make a mistake, I didn't notice anything obviously wrong with Dale's physics - or with his arguments. Your comment was far from specific enough to refer to any particular piece of text in this very long thread that one could re-examine closely with a microscope.

If you're thinking that Dale's obviously wrong and your'e obviously right - I'd think again.

If you're thinking that you're getting frustrated and need to take a break from talking about this thread for a while, that's a bit more reasonable.
 
  • #26
DrGreg said:
In the standard, simple version of the twins' paradox there are 3 inertial frames (the Earth frame, the outgoing astronaut frame and the ingoing astronaut frame). Just before the astronaut reaches the turning point, the astronaut's clock is at ½t' and in the outgoing astronaut inertial frame the sphere radius is ½ct'. When we transform to the ingoing astronaut inertial frame, we synchronise the frame clocks with the astronaut's ½t', but because of the relativity of simultaneity, the original light flash did not occur at time zero in this frame but at some earlier time, so the sphere radius in this frame is more than ½ct'. (It will actually be c(t−½t').) By the time the astronaut is back at Earth, a further time of ½t' will have passed on his clock and the sphere radius will have expanded to ct.
Sorry, I now withdraw the above post. I made a mistake and forgot to take account of the final change-of-frame when the astronaut comes to rest on Earth. None of the values I quoted were correct.

The answer is rather more simple. The time t' was accumulated in two other inertial frames and bears no relevance to the propagation of light as measured in the Earth frame. In that frame a time of t has elapsed and the radius is ct. All observers who are at rest in that frame will agree on the radius regardless of their past history.

If you are thinking you can somehow glue together all of the inertial frames in which the astronaut has been at rest, and all the non-inertial frames when he accelerated, to produce a "composite" single coordinate system, in which the astronaut is always at rest, well, yes, it is technically possible to do this (and, as others have pointed out, there is more than one way of doing so). But this frame is not an inertial frame and so the rules of inertial frames don't apply. In particular there is no requirement for the speed of light to be constant in such a frame. It can speed up, slow down, stop*, or even go backwards* in an arbitrary coordinate system. This is because in a non-inertial coordinate system, the "time" coordinate need not tick at the same rate as a proper-time clock at rest. (This may be described as "gravitational" -- or "pseudo-gravitational" -- time dilation.)



___________
*To be mathematically precise, if the time coordinate stops or goes backwards, then it's technically incorrect to describe it as a "coordinate".
 
  • #27
PAllen said:
I believe, given time, I could demonstrate many ways of doing it, but I have explained why I (and I think most anyone working in SR) would find the effort silly to expend. Doing all calculations in some convenient inertial frame is what essentially everyone does, in practice, in SR. Why do you want to make something simple seem complicated?

[Edit: Pervect is just discussing Rindler coordinates, which apply to uniform acceleration. One analog to these coordinates for a rocket path where you start at rest, accelerate away, then back, ending at rest, would be Fermi-normal coordinates. Another, as Dalespam mentioned, would be radar coordinates. Another coordinate system could be built from the Minguzzi simultaneity, as Passionfower referenced. If you used Fermi-Normal coordinates, you would find that, on return, distance to light sphere agrees with stay at home, but average light speed is greater, balancing the smaller proper time experienced. Dalespam already explained what you would get with Radar coordinates. There is no sense in which you can call one of these answers right and one wrong. I want to re-emphasize Dalespam's point that your whole expectation of what should be true is wrong for non-inertial coordinates in SR.

I don't believe it makes much sense to talk about non-inertial frames (rather than coordinates), except locally. The issue is the same as in GR. Specifically, there is a unique, simplest type of global coordinate system for each inertial frame in SR. For non-inertial frames, this is false, as it is, in general, in GR. Thus, it is clearer to treat frames as strictly local for non inertial motion, or quite generally, in GR.]

This thread is dead, but for the sake of future searches turning it up, I have a few technical corrections to the above.

As natural as Fermi-Normal coordinates (and Rindler coordinates for uniform acceleration) are, they have a key limitation - they don't generally cover all of spacetime. In the case of Rindler, they cover just one section of spacetime. The reason for this is that they would multiply map these regions, which is not allowed for a coordinate patch. This happens because the spacelike geodesics 4-orthogonal to different points on the 'time axis' world line intersect. Wherever this occurs, you have a region that cannot be covered with these coordinates. In the case of Fermi-Normal coordinates for the twin situation with rapid or instant acceleration then coasting away, then rapid or instant turnaround, then rapid or instant deceleration to a stop, there are three patches of spacetime not covered by the coordinates (actually six for instant accelerations, so let's assume nearly instant instead). If we assume the traveler goes to the right and back, then the uncovered patches are:

1) To the left of the initial acceleration
2) To the right of the turnaround
3) To the left of the stopping acceleration

As a result, for a signal emitted by the stay at home when the traveler starts, both the left going light path and the right going light path would pass out of the coordinate patch. Thus, any concept of computing overall coordinate speed of this signal is impossible in these coordinates. It is true that using these coordinates (but not any computation of the whole path). once the travel stops, the coordinate position of the right going ray will match the stay at home twin. The left going ray will remain outside of the coordinate patch for the traveler for a long time after they have stopped, but eventually will pass to a covered region, at which point the traveler will agree with stay at home on its distance.

Radar coordinates are able to cover the whole spacetime, even for sudden turnarounds. In an earlier post, Dalespam explained you would see speed of c for the signals (part of the definition of radar coordinates - any light ray to or from the time axis world line has speed c; rays between other points, not generally); and you would determine smaller distance than stay at home. They would never come to agreement on coordinate features of these light rays, but would for later ones, after they are back together.

The upshot is that Dr. Greg's final answer (also said in several earlier posts in this thread) is the only way the traveler agrees with the stay at home: once back, they simply use stay at home measurements.
 
  • #28
PAllen said:
T

As natural as Fermi-Normal coordinates (and Rindler coordinates for uniform acceleration) are, they have a key limitation - they don't generally cover all of spacetime. In the case of Rindler, they cover just one section of spacetime. The reason for this is that they would multiply map these regions, which is not allowed for a coordinate patch. This happens because the spacelike geodesics 4-orthogonal to different points on the 'time axis' world line intersect. Wherever this occurs, you have a region that cannot be covered with these coordinates.

Hi Am I correct in assuming that they are not allowed because they would map a reality that has no possible correspondence to the one we know.
Co-location of points with different time coordinates, , temporal disordering etc.??
Am I right that this is essentially the same as Minkowski hyper-surfaces of simultaneity wrt an accelerating frame? [with the added complication of an internal time differential.]

If this is correct would it also be true that planes of simultaneity in Minkowski space are equally false for those regions in the case of acceleration??

Do you think that the regions of invalidity only start at the point of intersection?
Or is it more likely that the divergence from correspondence with reality simply diminishes from that point as it approaches the bounds of the physical system??
Thanks
 
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1. How does acceleration affect the shape and size of a light wave front?

The shape and size of a light wave front is not affected by acceleration. Light waves travel at a constant speed in a vacuum, regardless of any acceleration or deceleration of the source.

2. Does the wavelength of a light wave change with acceleration?

No, the wavelength of a light wave is determined by the frequency of the wave and the medium it is traveling through. It does not change with acceleration.

3. Can acceleration cause a light wave to change direction?

No, light waves travel in a straight line unless they encounter a medium with a different refractive index, which can cause them to change direction. Acceleration does not have an effect on the direction of light waves.

4. Will the shape of a light wave front change if its source is accelerating?

No, the shape of a light wave front is determined by the source of the wave and the medium it is traveling through. The acceleration of the source does not have an impact on the shape of the wave front.

5. How does acceleration affect the speed of a light wave?

The speed of light is constant in a vacuum and is not affected by acceleration. However, if light waves are traveling through a medium with varying refractive index, their speed may be affected by the acceleration of the medium.

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