The SR Question of the Century

  • Thread starter Martin Miller
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Sr
In summary: the clocks need to be accurate to within a few hundreths of a second and the table needs to be stable.
  • #1
Martin Miller
49
0
The SR Question of the Century
=================================
=================================
Why has no one simply used two clocks on a table
to measure light's one-way speed?
=================================
=================================

(Note: No, Roemer did not do it; he used slow
clock transfer, where one clock spanned the
Earth's orbit, and since moving clocks run
slow, his clocks were asynchronous.)

For those who may need it, here is a detailed
version of my question:

=================================
Given two new atomic clocks still in their
shipping crates, how would anyone use these
clocks to measure light's one-way speed in
a way that is proved to be correct?
=================================

Basically, I am speaking simply of the one-way
version of the Michelson-Morley experiment.

And if you happen to believe that the MMx
round-trip experiment somehow even _implied_
one-way invariance, then you need to prove
this via the critical case of a frame that
moves wrt the light source.

The given question is extremely important
because an incorrect measurement of light's
one-way speed means incorrect measurements
of all one-way speeds and all time spans
involving two or more clocks.

The given question is also extremely important
because special relativity (our current theory
of time measurement) is based solely upon
Einstein's light postulate, which claims light
speed invariance in the one-way case.
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
How long must the table be and how accurate must the clocks be to satisfy an aether proponent?

Also, since GPS uses one-way transmissions, doesn't it qualify as a good test of the invariance of the speed of light?
 
  • #3
GPS good test? I don't know, so many effects are involved, I would hardly think it is "clean".

Here's a "Living Review" of the many effects involved in designing and maintaining the GPS:


http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/lrr-2003-1/index.html [Broken]


I think you have to assume one-way light travel goes at c, because of the issues involved in keeping the clocks synchronized as you separate them.

These issues are not important because in the solar system gravity is so weak and velocities so low, I guess.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #4
'outandbeyond' is right; in the GPS case,
as in all current 2-clock cases, scientists
simply assume one-way invariance and isotropy.

Since my question pertained to theoretical physics,
it matters not how long the tables are, and the
clocks are really ideal clocks.

Let me put it to 'russ_watters' this way:

Given two ideal unstarted spatially-separated clocks,
show how they could be correctly related temporally -
bearing in mind that proof is required, and also
bearing in mind that no assumptions are allowed,
and further bearing in mind that you must show this
for a frame that moves wrt the light source if light
signals are involved.

I claim that so far no one has ever correctly related
any two clocks in any frame. (Thus, no one has ever
correctly measured any one-way speed, any momentum,
or any two-clock time span.) (If Einstein had known
how to correctly relate clocks, then he would have
had absolute simultaneity instead of his merely
relative simultaneity, and SR would never have been
created.)
 
  • #5
also bearing in mind that no assumptions are allowed

I can't even assume I can turn the clocks on? That they're at rest with respect to each other? That if I send light signals from one location at regular intervals that the destination receives the signals at regular intervals? That there's not a michevious devil between the two clocks that will intercept all communications and transmit fake data?


If Einstein had known
how to correctly relate clocks, then he would have
had absolute simultaneity instead of his merely
relative simultaneity, and SR would never have been
created.

Sounds like you've already decided SR is wrong; I doubt any argument or experiment, no matter how sound, could convince you otherwise.
 
  • #6
Absolute simultaneity was assumed pre-Einstein's relativity theory. However, Einstein showed that this is something that has to be carefully defined in operational terms; say, partly by all observers agreeing that one and only one of them will be the arbitrator of which events are simultaneous and which not. He didn't acutally reject absolute simultaneity; just that it is something that has to be agreed on in operational terms beforehand, if it is to be used at all.

SR does not always need absolute simultaneity. GR theorists often define hypersurfaces in space-time, each of which has a unique time: i.e., defined absolute simultaneity. However, the definition can change from treatment to treatment.



I have been trying to think of a reason why it is necessary to specify that the clocks be unstarted. So far, i don't see that it is necessary.
 
  • #7
The SR Question of the Century
=================================================
=================================================
Why has no one simply used two clocks on a table
to measure light's one-way speed?
=================================================
=================================================
Good question Martin.

Don't get fobbed of with the GPS stuff or synchronization issues. Scientists are spending a fortune sending probes to Mars to try and find water, life, etc, surely this simple low cost test should be done.
I have no idea why nobody has done it, but I think the results will be surprising.
Two similar tests were done around the 1990s
1. Roland DeWitte used an electrical pulse to measure one-way speeds and found SR at fault (he is an amateur and so was ignored).
2. Krisher et al (JPL) did a test but the results were too noisy to be conclusive. However, they claimed it supported SR! (They are the professionals and so their results were accepted as good).
See http://www.kevin.harkess.btinternet.co.uk/oneway/oneway.html for more info and also go to "reasons Einstein was wrong"
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #8
Perhaps this should be explained: Either two events are simultaneous as seen by an observer, or they are not. Einstein's point is that events seen as simultaneous by one observer are not necessarily seen as simultaneous by any other observer. Is this what Martin Miller meant by mere "relative simultaneity"? If so, won't he please explain, contra Einstein, why all observers can see two events as simultaneous?


Ordinary distance measurements require simultaneity. If one had a measuring stick, then we could just line up points on the stick with the endpoints of the interval whose distance we wish to measure. However, if a one-way light-speed measuring procedure requires a distant place, then we would have to transport a clock there, correct?


Could table-top measurements of the one-way speed be made with today's technology? I guess not. But Martin Miller has made ideal clocks (and by definition? ideal measuring rods as well) available to us. So, let me see if I can ...

Put a one-meter stick on the table top. Put one unstarted clock at one end and the other at the other end. Nah, won't do. We need to start the clocks and make sure they are well synchronized. Then put one clock at one end and the other clock at the other end. We can design read-outs so that any observer standing in front of the table and equidistant from the clocks can monitor them to ensure that they are synchronized throughout the measurement process.

Release a light pulse at time = sometime and get the time = sometime + traveltime when the pulse arrives at the other end. One-way speed is then 1 meter/traveltime.

Neat, huh? However, H.L. Mencken said something to the effect that every neat, obvious, simple solution is apt to be wrong.
 
  • #9
People are trying to see if light speed varies from place to place; from time to time; from direction to direction (anti-isotropy).

See this "Living Review" article on experimental tests of GR:

http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/lrr-2001-4/index.html [Broken]
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #10
---

'outandbeyond2004' wrote:
"Put a one-meter stick on the table top. Put one unstarted clock at
one end and the other at the other end. Nah, won't do. We need to
start the clocks and make sure they are well synchronized. Then put
one clock at one end and the other clock at the other end. We can
design read-outs so that any observer standing in front of the table
and equidistant from the clocks can monitor them to ensure that they
are synchronized throughout the measurement process."

MM replies:
You did not tell us how the clocks are to be synchronized, and your
midpoint observer cannot verify correct synchronization unless he can
prove that he is not moving either toward or away from the light rays
from the clocks' readouts.

(To see that he may be moving wrt the light signals, simply add
a light source at each clock beside its readout, with the light
sources' frame moving wrt the clocks' frame, and let each source
emit light rays simultaneously with its nearby readout. This makes
it clear that only one frame out of an infinity of frames will
remain at rest relative to these sources, which in turn means that
only one frame out of an infinity of frames will remain at rest
in relation to the sources' light signals, which in turn means
that only one frame out of an infinity of them will remain at
rest in relation to the clock readouts' light signals. Bear in
mind that light's source independency guarantees us that the
light rays from a clock readout and a nearby light source will
travel together as if they were one ray.)
---

'Hurkyl' noted:
"Sounds like you've already decided SR is wrong; I doubt any argument
or experiment, no matter how sound, could convince you otherwise."

MM replies:
Try me.
---

'outandbeyond2004' noted:
"I have been trying to think of a reason why it is necessary to
specify that the clocks be unstarted. So far, i don't see that it
is necessary."

MM replies:
This was just an initial condition, not a final one. (I mentioned
it only to make sure that the experiment started from scratch;
the experimenter must of course start the clocks at some point,
but how and when are parts of the given problem.)

'outandbeyond2004' also noted:
"Perhaps this should be explained: Either two events are simultaneous as
seen by an observer, or they are not. Einstein's point is that events seen
as simultaneous by one observer are not necessarily seen as simultaneous by
any other observer. Is this what Martin Miller meant by mere "relative simultaneity"? If so, won't he please explain, contra Einstein, why all observers can see two events as simultaneous?"

MM replies:
Yes, that is exactly what I meant by "relative simultaneity," but I can
still see that a little more explanation is necessary here. The key
questions here are (a) Since events are observer-independent, why should
observers' mere _viewpoints_ of light rays from events be involved? and
(b) What is physical cause of Einstein's relative simultaneity?

To answer the last question first, the precise physical cause of the
relativity of simultaneity is simply different frame movements in
relation to the light rays from the events. No matter how two events
may actually occur, observers in different frames who view light rays
from the events _must_ see the rays arrive differently. For example,
Frame A's observer may move toward the light from Event 1 but away
from the light from Event 2, whereas Frame B's observer may move
away from the light from Event 1 but toward the light from Event 2.
(And it should be apparent that this answer also answers the first
question.)

Of course, simultaneity would not be relative if truly or absolutely
synchronous clocks were used to time events.

As I mentioned earlier, Einstein's clocks are not synchronous. In
fact, he explicitly admitted this in his book _Relativity_. Here is
how he put it:

quote from Einstein's _Relativity_:
" But an examination of this supposition would only be possible if
we already had at our disposal the means of measuring time."
[Ref.: http://www.bartleby.com/173/8.html]

In this brief sentence, Einstein said a lot. Since the context was
light's one-way, two-clock speed, he was admitting that he could
not correctly measure this speed. Also, he was admitting that he
could not correctly measure any other one-way speed because, as
he said, he did not possesses the means of (correctly) measuring
time. Further, he was admitting that he could not correctly
measure any two-clock times. In short, he was admitting that the
clocks of special relativity are not truly synchronous.

We do _not_ need a theory whose clocks are asynchronous.
We _do_ need synchronous clocks.
---

'wisp' noted:
"Good question Martin."

MM replies:
Thanks. And as soon as its full meaning has become apparent, you will
see that it is the most important question re flat space-time physics
that can be asked.

See the following to see why no rotating clocks can yield anisotropy:
http://www.geocities.com/antirelativity/Rotating_Clock_Analysis.html

The only real test of Einstein's light postulate is a direct and
simple measurement of light's one-way speed between two same-frame
clocks which are correctly related temporally. (No rotating clocks;
no transported clocks; no asynchronous {Einsteinian} clocks.)
---

'outandbeyond2004' further noted:
"People _are_ trying to see if light speed varies from place to place;
from time to time; from direction to direction (anti-isotropy)."

"See this "Living Review" article on experimental tests of GR:"

"relativity.livingreviews.experiments"

MM replies:
I saw nothing there about correctly synchronizing clocks or correctly
measuring any one-way speeds.

Here is what one must do to prove that one's two-clock time measurements
are correct:

[1] One must prove that one's clocks are correctly related.
[2] One must prove that one's clocks are not slowed.
[3] One must prove that the rod connecting the clocks is
not contracted.

So far, no one has presented a proof of any of the above; therefore,
no one has presented a proof that even mere _relative_ speeds can
be correctly measured, such as the speed of a bug relative to a log!
 
  • #11
Martin Miller, have you studied the lunar laser ranging experiment? There should be time-varying components in the data making possible an analysis to determine the one-way speed of light. I admit a lack of familiarity with the state of art: I do not know if such an analysis is possible now.
 
  • #12
To 'outandbeyond2004':
Since LLR (Lunar Laser Ranging) is a one-clock measurement of the
time taken by the light signal to travel to the moon and back, no
synchronization is involved.

To fully understand what it’s all about, we need a proper and
simple example, such as the following one:

[clock]---------[rod]---------[mirror]
[source]~~>ray

Imagine a rod in space which has been ruler-measured to be
1 LY long. (Ignore the hardships involved if this were actually
done.) Picture a started-and-running atomic clock at one end of
the rod, and a mirror at the other end. Imagine a light source
that is moving relative to the clock-mirror frame. As this light
source meets the clock in passing, the former emits a light ray
toward the mirror. It is at this point that we must be careful;
i.e., we must ask ourselves What are the consequences of the
relative motion between the clock-mirror frame and the light
source frame? Clearly, if the mirror moves away from the light
source, then the light ray from the source should take longer to
reach the mirror than otherwise. Similarly, it is clear that if
the mirror moves toward the light source, then the light ray from
the source should take less time to reach the mirror than otherwise.
However, if the rod is physically contracted, and if the clock is
physically slowed, then these two physical distortions will yield
an incorrect result, namely, round-trip light speed invariance.
Of course, this incorrectness could not be revealed by a ruler
because the ruler would also be physically contracted. Therefore,
an LLR measurement will always seem to obtain very accurate
results of the ('instantaneous') distance between two objects, but
this ignores the fact that (a) no one has taken into account the
objects' movements in relation to the light signals, (b) no one
has proved that the clock is unslowed, and (c) no one has proved
that the rod is uncontracted.

In other words, the Michelson-Morley experiment did not correctly
measure light's round-trip speed, and the LLR cannot correctly
measure the distance to the moon. (Given undistorted clocks and
rods, we would find that light's round-trip, one-clock speed
varies.)

Here are the differences and similarities of the Michelson-Morley
(MMx) round-trip case and the one-way case:

Round-trip Case:
The MMx null result is a law of nature; however,
the MMx result was incorrect because Nature distorted
the instruments.

One-way Case:
In the one-way case, there can be no law of nature
because Nature cannot synchronize clocks; however, man
can synchronize clocks, and if he synchronizes them
_correctly_ (absolute synchronization), then he can obtain
a _correct_ result. (Disclaimer: Of course, he would have
to mathematically correct for clock slowing and rod
shrinkage, but we have the formulas, so this is easy!)
 
  • #13
Martin Miller, your response does not show that you know how useful time-varying data can be. For the benefit of other readers if not yours, let me give an example.

A laser based on Earth is shooting photons at a mirror that is orbiting earth. Let's pretend we do not know exactly what the speed of the photons are, so we can calculate only roughly the round-trip distance to and from the mirror. Nevertheless, we continue to gather data, and we notice that the round-trip time varies with time. There is a diurnal dependence, a monthly dependence and an annual one, among others. Theorists develop an elaborate theoretical model of the experiment with many adjustable mathematical parameters, including one for the speed of light. When we have many data points spread over a period of many years, we try to fit the model to the data, adjusting the model parameters as necessary to match the data with the predictions of the model.

If the time-varying components of the data are not important, the fitting of the model to the data would not work, of course. One reason might be too much noise. However, if the quality of the data is good, then we may have an interesting or "tight" range of values for each parameter including the speed of light.

Actually, every experiment with important time varying data is modeled that way. Other examples are the Shapiro round-trip radar time delay experiment and binary pulsars. Many other ongoing experiments depend on the speed of light, so I feel fairly confident that we do have a good grip on its one-way value even though we have not yet measured it directly.

For details see the article I had linked to earlier and have relinked here for convenience:
http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/lrr-2001-4/index.html [Broken]
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #14
Martin,

Such clocks' asynchronicity may realize the GR effect of the expanding universe on nearly local time, or even the curvilinear movement of the observer himself relative to each clock.
 
  • #15
'outandbeyond2004' wrote:
"Many other ongoing experiments depend on the speed of light,
so I feel fairly confident that we do have a good grip on its
one-way value even though we have not yet measured it directly."

If we correctly word your above, then we have the following:
"Many other ongoing round-trip experiments depend on the
round-trip speed of light, so I feel fairly confident that
we do have a good grip on its round-trip value."

We certainly have a firm grip on light's round-trip speed - it is
invariant and isotropic; however, as I will prove below, the round-
trip speed has nothing to do with either light's one-way, two-clock
speed or with clock synchronization.

The conceptual keys behind the following experiment are two, namely,
(i) a ban on Einstein's rigged clocks (which are _forced_ by a
baseless definition from man to obtain one-way 'invariance'), and
(ii) the use of two frames sharing one light source (something
which is never done in relativity texts).

The physical facts upon which the experiment is based are also two,
viz., (i) the simple fact that light's motion through space is not
infinitely rapid, and (ii) the corollary that light must always
take a finite amount of time T to move between any two points.

The Apparatus (2 tables, 4 clocks, 1 light bulb):
[diagram given below]

>>> There are two narrow, adjacent tables, each 30 meters long and 1
meter high (per a ruler at rest wrt each table). Table F is fixed
relative to the lab, whereas Table R can roll relative to the lab.
>>> There is an unstarted clock [C] each end of each table.
>>> There is a light source (e.g., a light bulb, represented by the
asterisk) aligned with the left end of Table F at table-top height.

At the start, Table R's left end is to the left of Table F's left
end, as shown:

...[C]=======Table R=======[C]
...
...[C]=======Table F=======[C]

In the 2nd scene, the source emits a light ray to the right just
as the left clocks meet in passing and start on zero:

...[C]=======Table R=======[C]
...~~>ray
...[C]=======Table F=======[C]

In the 3rd scene, the light ray reaches Table F's right-hand clock:

....[C]=======Table R=======[C]
...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~>ray
...[C]======Table F======[C]

In the final scene, the light ray reaches Table R's right-hand clock:

....[C]=======Table R=======[C]
...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~>ray
...[C]======Table F======[C]

Since not even a light ray can be in two places at once, and
since (as was mentioned above) not even a light ray can move
infinitely rapid), the ray must take a finite amount of time
T to travel between the two right-hand clocks.

Here is what the experiment tells us about light's one-way
speed relative to each of the two frames:

***************************
Light's one-way speed wrt Table F
= 30m/100ns = c

Light's one-way speed wrt Table R
= 30m/(100+T)ns =/= c
***************************

In other words, experiment shows that light's one-way speed
varies with frame velocity.

So how did Einstein obtain his one-way invariance? He did so
by incorrectly placing the _same_ time x/c on both right-hand
clocks when they were 'hit' by the light ray.

Why did Einstein force clocks to obtain one-way invariance?
He did this because he improperly extrapolated invariance
from the round-trip case.

Ironically, exactly none of the above has anything at all to
do with the real problem which is How to correctly measure
time? (And this problem was also ignored by outandbeyond's
talk of "how useful time-varying data can be.")

In other words, the real problem for today's space-time
theorist is How can clocks be correctly synchronized?

Here is a hint: Without using more than one clock, one
must be able to guarantee that the clock-starting entities
have truly equal speeds relative to the clocks.

Let's quit talking about "how useful time-varying data can be,"
"how great the GPS system is," "how wonderful it is that we
have atomic clocks," "how the MMx took away the aether," "how
Einstein made time relative," "how wonderful special relativity
is," "how the MMx proved round-trip invariance," etc., etc.,
etc., and let's concentrate on the real issue of absolute clock
synchronization because as of now, we cannot even correctly
measure the speed of a bug relative to a log.
 
Last edited:
  • #16
Wow, Martin - what you suggest is a test of relativity that ignores the effects of relativity. You completely miss the point of SR by not applying it to your apparatus: the moving table experiences a tme dilation and as a result, it still takes 100ns (according to the moving clocks) and still measures C to be C.

This is why I asked you before how big your apparatus had to be and how accurate the clocks had to be to test this. Add also how fast the apparatus has to move and how you synchronize clocks in different frames of reference. Try doing the calculation: I think you will find that for an apparatus like the one you suggest, time dilation (or your "T") is less than the precision of the experiment and thus outside its ablity to detect. But with a big enough (and fast enough) apparatus, you will detect a time dilation.

And if you plan on arguing against time dilation, please remember that time dilation is no longer just an untested prediction of SR, but is in fact, experimental data.
 
Last edited:
  • #17
Martin, I don't suppose you ever got caught speeding. You'd be put in an asylum for the insane if you tried to convince the patrolman with statements like this:

\\
as of now, we cannot even correctly
measure the speed of a bug relative to a log. //

Good driving, Martin!

Kidding aside, it wasn't Einstein's original idea that the speed of light is constant to every inertial observer. Rather it is a theoretical consequence of Maxwell's equations for electromagnetism. These equations in turn are based on the results of countless experiments that were done long before Einstein's birth. Einstein did have the original thought that the laws of mechanics should be recast to be based on the same speed of light constant as the laws of electromagnetism are.

Martin, your problem may be that you are basing your theory on your everyday experience, instead of experiments done by others. It can be difficult to appreciate how every working GPS device is confirming the truth of GR and SR. It is indeed hard for people to accept that the speed of light is absolutely the same to every inertial observer. So very, very bizarre.
 
  • #18
Note to russ_watters:
Time dilation cancels out in the experiment because the
two tables speeds through space are equal.

outandbeyond2004 noted:
"Kidding aside, it wasn't Einstein's original idea that the
speed of light is constant to every inertial observer. Rather
it is a theoretical consequence of Maxwell's equations for
electromagnetism."

You are mixing up light's propagational motion through space
with Einstein's definition of clock synchronization. Maxwell's
equations say nothing at all about light's one-way, two-clock
speed, and Einstein's definition says nothing at all about
Maxwell's equations. (If you believe otherwise, then tell us
how Maxwell synchronized clocks.)

Since you have claimed that light's one-way, two-clock speed
is the same for all inertial observers, you have the burden
to prove this, so let's see if you can.

You have also claimed the "truth" of SR, so let's see if you
can prove that its clocks are correctly synchronized.

And I could not help but notice that you had no counter to my
very simple and very direct experimental proof that Einstein's
clocks are not correctly synchronized, and that light's one-way
speed is not invariant.

I have presented a simple and direct experiment, and you have
(to put it bluntly, so pardon me!) presented absolutely nothing.
To repeat, the burden of proof is on the claimer. (This means
that I did not even need my experiment!)

Let's please stop runnning around in circles, and let's see
some 'meat on the table' for Einstein's case! Where's the
beef??
 
  • #19
Originally posted by Martin Miller
Note to russ_watters:
Time dilation cancels out in the experiment because the
two tables speeds through space are equal.
In relativity, there is no such thing as "speed though space" - no absolute speed, only relative speed: the speed of each table relative to the other. And even if there were an absolute speed, since the tables are moving relative to each other, their absolute speeds would be different.

Sorry, no, this is a classic time/length dilation problem.
I have presented a simple and direct experiment, and you have
(to put it bluntly, so pardon me!) presented absolutely nothing.
To repeat, the burden of proof is on the claimer. (This means
that I did not even need my experiment!)

Let's please stop runnning around in circles, and let's see
some 'meat on the table' for Einstein's case! Where's the
beef??
Hehe, no. That's called burden-of-proof-shifting. Einstein's relativity is the accepted explantion because it has met the scientific community's standard of proof. YOU are claiming it is false, and YOU must therefore provide positive evidence of that. It is clear to me, however, that your assertions are based soley on your flawed understanding of what the theory says.
 
Last edited:
  • #20
russ_watters noted:
"In relativity, there is no such thing as "speed though space" -
no absolute speed, only relative speed: the speed of each table
relative to the other. And even if there were an absolute speed,
since the tables are moving relative to each other, their absolute
speeds would be different."

"Sorry, no, this is a classic time/length dilation problem."

You can't have your cake and eat it, too.
You were the one who mentioned time dilation.
Were you speaking of intrinsic clock slowing or
a mere point-of-view "slowing"? If it's the latter,
then it has nothing to do with physics; if it's
the former, then it must be due to clock motion
through space.

And, no, even using speeds through space does not mean
that the tables speeds through space differ because I
can specify that their speeds through space are equal.

russ_watters noted:
"Hehe, no. That's called burden-of-proof-shifting. Einstein's relativity
is the accepted explantion because it has met the scientific community's
standard of proof. YOU are claiming it is false, and YOU must therefore
provide positive evidence of that. It is clear to me, however, that your
assertions are based soley on your flawed understanding of what the theory says."

To repeat, ad nauseam, where is your proof of one-way, two-clock
invariance and isotropy?

To also repeat ad nauseam, where is your proof that Einstein's
cute little (hehe) clocks are correctly related temporally?

And while you are at it, please present at least one scientific
prediction made by special relativity. (That is, at least one
prediction that does not directly depend upon clocks which have
yet to be validated by you or anyone else.)

And I did not merely claim that Einstein's clocks are incorrectly
related, I proved it experimentally. I also proved that light's
one-way speed varies with frame velocity.

Re your claim that "Einstein's relativity is the accepted explantion
because it has met the scientific community's standard of proof,"
who in that community has experimentally measured light's one-way
speed and found it to be invariant and isotropic? Was this critical
experiment performed under cover of darkness at the Antarctic? hehe!

And please try to remember that Einstein himself explicitly
admitted that he did not possesses the means of measuring time!

This is why no one has ever correctly measured even the relative
speed of a bug wrt to log.
 
  • #21
Being a nice guy, I let russ_watters off a little too
easily in my prior post.

What I should have asked him for was the math.

Will he please show us mathematically how time dilation
of any sort in any way invalidates my experiment?

Thanks.
 
  • #22
The Cosmic Radiation Background does seem to provide an absolute frame of reference. Any Doppler shift dipole (red-shifted area in one direction and blue-shifted area in the opposite direction) that shows up in measurements of the CRB can be interpreted as being the effect of the solar system's motion wrt the CRB. Any observer, not just inertial ones, can check whether a dipole appears or not. (To be sure, if the observer were completely enclosed in a box that does not permit observations to be made of the outside of the box . . .) However, Martin's argument still makes no sense.

Table-top experiments to measure the speed of light are, as far as I know, beyond the means and abilities of the vast majority of the world. Maybe not even Bill Gates could do them to get good data, even if he were to devote most of his wealth.

Martin still shows no sign of having grasped the beauty of time-varying data, as I tried to show in prior posts. Why would varying the two-way distance in a known and repeatable way NOT allow measurement of the one-way value (assuming isotropy even if not experimentally verified yet), even if some experiments always have the light going to and fro?

Let's set up a table-top experiment in imagination. Attach a laser to the table together with a "radar blip" detector that records the time of departure and the time of arrival of each blip. Put a mirror on rails mounted on a motor. The motor moves at a rate of the fraction of the vacuum speed of light [tex]v[/tex] (we would need a long table) away from the laser. At time = 0 let the mirror be 1 meter from the laser, and let the laser release a blip, which travels to the mirror. We are doing the experiment in vacuum, so SR says that the blip is traveling at c. Let's see what SR predicts. The mirror moves a distance [tex]D[/tex] until the blip hits it, given by

[tex] D = \frac{v}{1-v}[/tex] (meters)

So the time the blip has to take to hit the mirror [tex]T_b[/tex] is given by

[tex] T_b = \frac{1}{c} + \frac{\frac{v}{1-v}}{c}[/tex]

[tex] = \frac{1}{c(1 - v)}[/tex]

The blip bounces off the mirror back to the blip detector, traveling the same distance in the opposite direction. If we have isotropy, then the total trip time is twice [tex]T_b[/tex] = [tex] 2T_b[/tex].

All right so far?
 
  • #23
outandbeyond2004 noted:
"Table-top experiments to measure the speed of light are, as far as
I know, beyond the means and abilities of the vast majority of the
world. Maybe not even Bill Gates could do them to get good data,
even if he were to devote most of his wealth."

Nice try, but no cigar.
To repeat, here is the given problem:
No one can - even on paper - correctly synchronize clocks.
(Therefore, no one can - even on paper - correctly measure
any two-clock time span, including the time span involved
in measuring light's one-way, two-clock speed.)

outandbeyond2004 also noted:
"Let's set up a table-top experiment in imagination.
[--long, irrelevant experiment snipped--]

All right so far?"


No. Just a bunch of smoke and mirrors.
(Not to mention your math typo. D should have been v/(c-v),
which means that Tb should have been c/[c(c-v)] = 1/(c-v).)

You assumed what you were trying to prove; i.e., you merely assumed
a one-way light speed of c. (If you did not merely assume this, then
you need to tell us how you correctly measured light's one-way speed
before you used the value c in your given Rube Goldbergian nightmare.)

You also assumed that you could correctly measure both v and D.
Where's your proof?

You wrote:
"Let's see what SR predicts."

SR does not predict one-way invariance - Einstein forced light's
one-way speed to be c by definition. (This is also known as a
convention.)(It is of no more importance to physics than the
convention of setting the length of a foot ruler to match the
King's foot.)
 
  • #24
Originally posted by Martin Miller
No one can - even on paper - correctly synchronize clocks.

What do you mean by that?

What is wrong with the following procedure:

1. Start two clocks on the same signal,
2. Wait a month,
3. Compare their times. The difference, divided by one month, gives you the fractional error on their synchronization.

For atomic clocks, that fractional error is small enough as to make definite statements about relativistic corrections.

Also, speacking "on paper", would you agree that two cesium atoms are "acceptably synchronized"? What about two radioactive samples (of the same material)?
 
  • #25
Martin, well, yes, the constant light speed principle of SR can be considered to be a convention. If you can get enough people to agree to reject it in favor of another "convention," you would have wrought a revolution in physics. The name "Martin Miller" would be on lips just as "Albert Einstein" was once. (No this is NOT sarcasm or irony.)

You'd be going against not only scientific inertia but Oakham's Rule (Occam's Rule) and experimental results though.

I had not realized this before, but not only does the constant principle imply isotropy everywhere for inertial observers, but that two-way measurements imply one-way speed. Two-way c = one-way c if isotropy is true. Hence insisting on one-way measurements is tantamount to insisting that isotropy is not true. Are you aware of that point?

If you are, then where's the experimental evidence? Remember that I wrote before that people ARE looking for evidence that the constant principle is not true? People have been doing so for a long time. Albert Michelson, for one, who rejected SR and would have loved to disproved it.
 
  • #26
ahrkron wrote:
[from MM: My reply to outandbeyond follows]

"quote:

Originally posted by Martin Miller
No one can - even on paper - correctly synchronize clocks.

What do you mean by that?

What is wrong with the following procedure:

1. Start two clocks on the same signal,
2. Wait a month,
3. Compare their times. The difference, divided by one month, gives
you the fractional error on their synchronization.

For atomic clocks, that fractional error is small enough as to make
definite statements about relativistic corrections.

Also, speacking "on paper", would you agree that two cesium atoms
are "acceptably synchronized"? What about two radioactive samples
(of the same material)?"

MM replies:
I meant just what I wrote; as of today, no one has placed on paper
a procedure for correctly (or absolutely) synchronizing two clocks.
(If Einstein had had absolute synchronization, then he would not
have had relative synchronization and SR.)

The fact that you asked the question re cesium atoms shows that you
do not understand what "on paper" means; it means that ideal (perfect)
clocks are assumed.

And as for your above procedure, it is much too vague to analyze.
(For example, how do you "compare their times"?)
Why can't you draw a diagram of the two clocks, and show their times?
Is it too much to ask for a simple numerical example?

-------

outandbeyond2004 noted:
"Martin, well, yes, the constant light speed principle of SR can be
considered to be a convention. If you can get enough people to agree to
reject it in favor of another "convention," you would have wrought a
revolution in physics. The name "Martin Miller" would be on lips just
as "Albert Einstein" was once. (No this is NOT sarcasm or irony.)"

But it is an appeal to authority.
And I certainly do _not_ wish to merely use another convention; what
I wish to do is to replace Einstein's asynchronous clocks with ones
that are synchronous. Is this not a reasonable goal?

outandbeyond2004 noted:
"You'd be going against not only scientific inertia but Oakham's
Rule (Occam's Rule) and experimental results though."

Einstein himself went against 300 years of scientific inertia.
And as for experimental results, they are in my favor because
my experiment proved that light's one-way speed varies. (It
also proved the incorrectness of Einstein's clocks.)

outandbeyond2004 noted:
"I had not realized this before, but not only does the constant
principle imply isotropy everywhere for inertial observers, but that
two-way measurements imply one-way speed. Two-way c = one-way c if
isotropy is true. Hence insisting on one-way measurements is
tantamount to insisting that isotropy is not true.
Are you aware of that point?"

What do you mean by "isotropy everywhere for inertial observers"?
Are you aware of the historical fact that even Einstein admitted
mathematically that light's one-way speed will vary given synchronous
clocks?

[REF.: "w is the required velocity of light with
respect to the carriage, and we have w = c - v.
The velocity of propagation of a ray of light relative to the
carriage thus comes out smaller than c." (From _Relativity_ Chap.
VII)]

outandbeyond2004 further noted:
"If you are, then where's the experimental evidence? Remember that
I wrote before that people ARE looking for evidence that the constant
principle is not true? People have been doing so for a long time. Albert Michelson, for one, who rejected SR and would have loved to
disproved it."

I have already presented one experimental proof of the variance of light's one-way speed. Here is yet another:

Given 2 people (P1 and P2) meeting in passing while steadily walking at different speeds as a single light ray approaches, as shown:

...P1....<~~~~ray
...P2

At the above critical point in the experiment, both the light ray's tip is at a single point, and the observers are at a single point; this proves to the observers that the ray is now equidistant from them; they can qualitatively label this distance X.

After the observers separate, the ray will reach one of them
first, as shown:

...P1<~~~~~~~~ray
P2

Since the tip of the light ray cannot be in two places at once,
the observers know that it reached them sequentially at absolutely
different times. (Here is a down-to-earth example: If I see the
real you in Texas and in New York, then this proves that I saw you
at absolutely different times because you cannot be in two places
at once.) They can qualitatively label these absolutely different
times T1 and T2.

The observers can now qualitatively compare one-way light speeds.
Here are their simple results:

Light's speed wrt P1 = X/T1

Light's speed wrt P2 = X/T2

This is a simple and direct experimental proof of the variance
of light's one-way speed.

How many more such proofs do you need?
 
Last edited:
  • #27
Originally posted by Martin Miller
The fact that you asked the question re cesium atoms shows that you do not understand what "on paper" means

Don't patronize.

And as for your above procedure, it is much too vague to analyze (For example, how do you "compare their times"?)

1. Make the two clocks as small as possible, and make them able to start and stop upon reception of an electric signal.
2. Also, have them store their final count in memory, and display (and keep) it in a screen.

This way, you can start and stop both by connecting the same trigger wire to both terminals. Once they stop, you can read the final counts on the screens.

Since they were started and stopped by the same signal, you can then subtract their resulting counts and do whatever adjustment you need until they coincide after, say, a month. Then you know that their counts are the same up to the fraction 1/(number of counts in a month) of the times they measure.
 
  • #28
ahrkron wrote:
"1. Make the two clocks as small as possible, and make them able
to start and stop upon reception of an electric signal.
2. Also, have them store their final count in memory, and display
(and keep) it in a screen."

"This way, you can start and stop both by connecting the same trigger
wire to both terminals. Once they stop, you can read the final counts
on the screens."

"Since they were started and stopped by the same signal, you can then
subtract their resulting counts and do whatever adjustment you need
until they coincide after, say, a month. Then you know that their counts
are the same up to the fraction 1/(number of counts in a month) of the
times they measure."

You cannot use one trigger wire for two clocks.
You cannot start two clocks with one signal.
Would you mind drawing a diagram?
(And bear in mind that if you were able to absolutely
synchronize two clocks, then you would be the _first_
person in history to do so.)
 
  • #29
Originally posted by Martin Miller
You cannot use one trigger wire for two clocks.

We do it all the time in lots of devices. You just need to connect the trigger wire to both clocks (say, using a trigger wire made in the shape of a "Y", so that no inhomogeneities make you nervous). Antother, equivalent way, would be to solder together the two clocks' trigger terminals and still use one wire to start them both up.

You cannot start two clocks with one signal.

Once you have the two clocks' terminal connected to the same source, you just send the signal. Each will receive half the current, but they will start prompted by the same pulse.
 
  • #30
Oh, sorry, I see now that you ARE asserting anisotropy . . . are you? I feel a little confused.

Your P1-P2-light ray does not prove that. It is only a thought experiment; and, more important, your analysis is mistaken or inadequate. The light ray is going in one direction only. To prove anisotropy you need to show that speeds in other directions are different. That light speed may vary from place to place or time to time is not what is meant by anisotropy. I assume from now on that you meant to disprove anisotropy. Again, certainly not.
That the light ray reaches P1 before P2 is merely a consequence of the different speeds of the persons, not of anisotropy. You can repeat the experiment in another direction, by rotating the "arena" (where the persons are walking and over which the ray is traveling). You did not do that not even in imagination. I would scarely be astonished if the results of the experiment came out exactly the same, provided the initial conditions were reproduced exactly, except for direction. However you would stagger about and cry out, "But we used asynchronous clocks! How is this possible? HOW?"
 
  • #31
And don't forget that everyday observation contradicts classical mechanics too! Inertia? Pthht! When I stop pushing something, it stops!
 
  • #32
In a previous post

[tex]v[/tex]

is a dimensionless quantity representing a fraction of the speed of light. If you have a velocity in say meters/sec, divide it by c before plugging it into

[tex]v[/tex]

. Sorry.


It's been fun, it made me think about issues I had not really thought about before, and I think I gained a better understanding of SR. Good mental exercise, too, from trying to convince a skeptic of the truth of SR. This is not necessarily my last post in this topic, but . . .
 
  • #33
Originally posted by Hurkyl
And don't forget that everyday observation contradicts classical mechanics too! Inertia? Pthht! When I stop pushing something, it stops!


Not true. Performing the ball rolling experiment by Galileo would show that the ball always tries to achieve a final height that is equal to its initial height, roughly demonstrating a conservation of energy. And probably by oiling the surface the ball rolled on, he and Newton were able to show friction as a force that slowed down the ball, so that in its absence, the previously demonstrated conservation of energy would require the ball to move for all time.
No contradictions at all. Galileo and Newton merely used inductive reasoning to arrive at the law of inertia.

On the other hand, Einstein's SR proposed a totally absurd and illogical notion that velocity of light can be an absolute constant for all observers, regardless of their velocities through space. This is trivially proven false by demonstrating that motion exists. Or more elegantly, like MM, that one ray of light cannot be everywhere at once.
 
Last edited:
  • #34


Originally posted by Eyesaw
SR dogma...
Heh - so SR is 100 year old dogma while Newtonian physics is 500 year old...what?

Eyesaw and MM, asserting something to be true is not the same as proving it. You guys have made a lot of assertions but have provided only misunderstood interpetations as proof. SR is thoroughly proven. If you wish to overturn it, first learn it. Of course once you learn what it and the evidence for it actually says, you'll realize why it is accepted: it works.

Also, while arguments are welcome, attitudes are not. Lose the attitudes.
 
  • #35
Originally posted by Martin Miller

I have already presented one experimental proof of the variance of light's one-way speed. Here is yet another:

Given 2 people (P1 and P2) meeting in passing while steadily walking at different speeds as a single light ray approaches, as shown:

...P1....<~~~~ray
...P2

At the above critical point in the experiment, both the light ray's tip is at a single point, and the observers are at a single point; this proves to the observers that the ray is now equidistant from them; they can qualitatively label this distance X.

After the observers separate, the ray will reach one of them
first, as shown:

...P1<~~~~~~~~ray
P2

Since the tip of the light ray cannot be in two places at once,
the observers know that it reached them sequentially at absolutely
different times. (Here is a down-to-earth example: If I see the
real you in Texas and in New York, then this proves that I saw you
at absolutely different times because you cannot be in two places
at once.) They can qualitatively label these absolutely different
times T1 and T2.

The observers can now qualitatively compare one-way light speeds.
Here are their simple results:

Light's speed wrt P1 = X/T1

Light's speed wrt P2 = X/T2

This is a simple and direct experimental proof of the variance
of light's one-way speed.

How many more such proofs do you need? [/B]

You had the right idea but this experiment is flawed. The X distance the light traveled with respect to your thought experiment is different for p1 and p2. The experiment should be revised to
say that x marks the spot where p1 and p2 meet, who were traveling at different velocities so that when the light strikes the spot x, p1 and p2 would have traveled a different distance with respect to the light in the same amount of time. I.e.,

light's speed wrt P1 = (X + P1x)/T
light's speed wrt P2 = (X + P2x)/T

c for P1 not equal to c for p2- QED.
 
<h2>What is "The SR Question of the Century"?</h2><p>"The SR Question of the Century" refers to the question of whether or not space and time are absolute or relative concepts. This question has been debated by scientists and philosophers for centuries.</p><h2>Why is "The SR Question of the Century" important?</h2><p>This question is important because it has significant implications for our understanding of the universe and how it operates. The answer to this question can impact our understanding of physics, gravity, and the fundamental laws of nature.</p><h2>What is the difference between absolute and relative concepts?</h2><p>Absolute concepts refer to things that exist independently and do not change based on perspective or context. Relative concepts, on the other hand, are dependent on perspective and can vary based on context. In the context of space and time, absolute concepts would suggest that they exist independently of an observer, while relative concepts would suggest that they are dependent on an observer's frame of reference.</p><h2>What is the theory of relativity and how does it relate to "The SR Question of the Century"?</h2><p>The theory of relativity, proposed by Albert Einstein, states that the laws of physics are the same for all observers in uniform motion and that the speed of light is constant in all inertial frames of reference. This theory has been used to support the idea of relative space and time, as it suggests that they are not absolute concepts. Therefore, it is closely related to "The SR Question of the Century" as it provides evidence for the idea of relative space and time.</p><h2>Is there a definitive answer to "The SR Question of the Century"?</h2><p>Currently, there is no definitive answer to this question. Scientists and philosophers continue to debate and explore the concept of space and time, and it is possible that a definitive answer may never be reached. However, advancements in technology and further research may bring us closer to understanding this fundamental question about the nature of the universe.</p>

What is "The SR Question of the Century"?

"The SR Question of the Century" refers to the question of whether or not space and time are absolute or relative concepts. This question has been debated by scientists and philosophers for centuries.

Why is "The SR Question of the Century" important?

This question is important because it has significant implications for our understanding of the universe and how it operates. The answer to this question can impact our understanding of physics, gravity, and the fundamental laws of nature.

What is the difference between absolute and relative concepts?

Absolute concepts refer to things that exist independently and do not change based on perspective or context. Relative concepts, on the other hand, are dependent on perspective and can vary based on context. In the context of space and time, absolute concepts would suggest that they exist independently of an observer, while relative concepts would suggest that they are dependent on an observer's frame of reference.

What is the theory of relativity and how does it relate to "The SR Question of the Century"?

The theory of relativity, proposed by Albert Einstein, states that the laws of physics are the same for all observers in uniform motion and that the speed of light is constant in all inertial frames of reference. This theory has been used to support the idea of relative space and time, as it suggests that they are not absolute concepts. Therefore, it is closely related to "The SR Question of the Century" as it provides evidence for the idea of relative space and time.

Is there a definitive answer to "The SR Question of the Century"?

Currently, there is no definitive answer to this question. Scientists and philosophers continue to debate and explore the concept of space and time, and it is possible that a definitive answer may never be reached. However, advancements in technology and further research may bring us closer to understanding this fundamental question about the nature of the universe.

Similar threads

  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
58
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
29
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
25
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
59
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
20
Views
746
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
23
Views
968
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
12
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
16
Views
612
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
34
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
21
Views
1K
Back
Top