Age of Universe relative to what?

  • #101
my_wan said:
I don't have a flash period, I have a light on 100% of the time. Neither do I have a t=0 anywhere period, or t= anything. Nor is there any pair of events that I measure for comparison.
I know. That is not the point.

my_wan said:
The pure geometry does all that for me
The point is that the "pure geometry" depends on the synchronization convention. I.e. if the tube is straight under one synchronization convention then it is curved under another convention, and both predict the same experimental results.

my_wan said:
Instead of this t= strawman when clearly i do not label t= to say what RPM something is rotating. I don't care when its rotating nor when the light was on.
Just because you don't label anything t doesn't imply that time is unimportant.
 
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  • #102
my_wan said:
Yet here you are pretending I must not have even read it!
...
Even if you suppose my method is invalid you still have to invalidate E Riis et al, Phys. Rev. Lett, 60(2) (1988), and C. M. Will, Phys. Rev. D 45(2), 403-411 (1992), to justify the false claims on wiki.
Since you read the wikipedia article on "The one-way speed of light", why do say that I have to invalidate C. M. Will's paper when the article pointed out that:
In 1997 the experiment was re-analysed by Zhang who showed that, in fact, only the two-way speed had been measured. Will later confirmed that this conclusion was indeed correct.
And the paper by Riis was not claiming to measure the value of the one-way speed of light, it was similar to the previous experiment we discussed.

But you are claiming to be able to measure the one-way speed of light with your apparatus but I'm confused by this:
my_wan said:
Hence my approach was to measure "a" one way speed where synchronization is irrelevant.
Are you saying that your approach would measure a speed that is different from 299,792,458 m/s?
 
  • #103
ghwellsjr said:
Since you read the wikipedia article on "The one-way speed of light", why do say that I have to invalidate C. M. Will's paper when the article pointed out that:

And the paper by Riis was not claiming to measure the value of the one-way speed of light, it was similar to the previous experiment we discussed.

But you are claiming to be able to measure the one-way speed of light with your apparatus but I'm confused by this:
These approaches were designed not to measure the speed of light in either direction, but rather to measure an anisopy in two directions of light. Yet you are confused by my my attempt at correcting this. So first let's look at the criticisms of these designs. Here is the abstract by Israel Pérez, which Zhang referenced:

Abstract (Pérez): [PLAIN]http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.4837 said:
In[/PLAIN] this contribution the question of the isotropy of the one-way speed of light from an experimental perspective is addressed. In particular, we analyze two experimental methods commonly used in its determination. The analysis is aimed at clarifying the view that the one-way speed of light cannot be determined by techniques in which physical entities close paths. The procedure employed here will provide epistemological tools such that physicists understand that a direct measurement of the speed not only of light but of any physical entity is by no means trivial. Our results shed light on the physics behind the experiments which may be of interest for both physicists with an elemental knowledge in special relativity and philosophers of science.

So why is my not closing paths in the setup I outlined so confusing?
ghwellsjr said:
Are you saying that your approach would measure a speed that is different from 299,792,458 m/s?
It bothers that that you would use the word "would" in red, simply on the grounds that it implies I am making a claim that the two-way light speed differs from the one way speed. Even in the context of GR, where GR doesn't hold light speed at an absolute constant, the speed is the same in both closed directions from anyone frame. GR has effectively the same contraction factor LET style transforms posit. The difference being that these transforms LET style theories invoke correspond to gravitational distortions in GR.

So before answering your question, to preempt a strawman as seems warranted, let's look at speed and distance variances that can be measured. If we are talking about a length contraction of some factor which exactly corresponds to an inverse time dilation factor ##\Delta L \equiv 1/\Delta t##, then (unless you want to invoke coordinate dependence) the notion that you are even talking about a different distance in any local frame is moot. Measurability will strictly be dependent on a local interval in which the measurement is performed that differs from the intervals of the local space being measured. Not possible in a local measurement. Under GR these transforms are allowed, even required for gravitational effects. Thus in GR you have have a depth of field over a given distance with varying relational lengths. Yet comparing lengths in both directions will still be the same even if the speed of light is not.

So for GR type distance variations, which can't be measured via speed comparisons with closed paths, yes it will measure a differing speed of light. For interval type measurements, where distance is strictly defined by a choice of units under which ##\Delta L \equiv 1/\Delta t## is constant, no such measurement is possible. This later case is exactly the specified by SR with our inertial assumptions. Hence I do not expect the experiment to measure squat, as the "would" in your question implies. However, it does measure the one way light speed. There are two ways to get a speed c measure that differs from c, the first being fairly absurd but technically valid. (1) If an only if ##\Delta L## and ##1/\Delta t## was not separably constant in the manner specified by SR in a contiguous inertial space. (2) In situations, such as defined by GR, where ##\Delta L## and ##1/\Delta t## covaries over the space of ##L##.

Given the above qualifications of what constitutes a measurement of speed c, yes, in situations where ##\Delta L## locally varies over ##L## or locally ##\Delta L \neq 1/\Delta t## in violation of SR, the measurement I describe will measure c different from 299,792,458 m/s. The later case is fairly absurd, though postulated by some. The former case is a standard part of GR, in which much of the spacelike interval ##\Delta L##, on which the measurement depends, is not local to the frame in which the measurement is performed. Relativity then predicts that there must then exist a varying gravitational potential somewhere across ##\Delta L## even if the endpoints are effectively in flat spacetime.

The setup I defined is in fact a one-way measure light speed, not simply a comparison of speeds from both directions as in the referenced experiments.
 
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  • #104
One other remark I have about Israel Perez's paper in the European Journal of Physics:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.4837

[PLAIN]http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.4837 said:
From[/PLAIN] this analysis representative expressions of the problem will be derived for the one-way and two-way speed of any physical entity (PE).
Although not explicitly stated here, the notion of labeling speed as a physical entity (PE) is implied. It cannot even mechanistically be labeled a physical variable in any strict sense even with purely Galilean transforms. I often use the kinetic energy of a pair of meteors to illustrate this, but this obviously also applies to speed. Like asking which if either meteor has a speed of 0. Speed is not a PE, it is the product of a coordinate choice. It seems to me that often what is being chased with one-way light speed arguments is a speed which is supposed by definition to constitute a PE. Though the Galilean linearity of simultaneity makes ignoring the facts trivial, speed labeled as a PE is not even entirely defensible under Galilean relativity. It's a coordinate choice, not a PE.
 
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  • #105
my_wan said:
Speed is not a PE, it is the product of a coordinate choice.
Then how do you think that your device can measure it independently of the simultaneity convention which is part of your coordinate choice? You seem to be arguing against the key point you are making.

Suppose we have a theory where the one-way speed of light in the +x direction is infinite and the one way speed of light in the -x direction is .5 c and the speed of light is c in the y and z directions and distances are unchanged wrt standard SR. If we have a standard coordinate system T,X,Y,Z in units where c=1 then our non-standard system is:
t=T-X
x=X
y=Y
z=Z

Do you see how this is nothing more than a change in simultaneity and how your device cannot distinguish between these two simultaneity conventions?
 
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  • #106
DaleSpam said:
Then how do you think that your device can measure it independently of the simultaneity convention which is part of your coordinate choice? You seem to be arguing against the key point you are making.

Suppose we have a theory where the one-way speed of light in the +x direction is infinite and the one way speed of light in the -x direction is .5 c and the speed of light is c in the y and z directions and distances are unchanged wrt standard SR. If we have a standard coordinate system T,X,Y,Z in units where c=1 then our non-standard system is:
t=T-X
x=X
y=Y
z=Z

Do you see how this is nothing more than a change in simultaneity and how your device cannot distinguish between these two simultaneity conventions?
Of course, but look at what you have attributed the anisotropy to, the time component. What exactly do you mean to say when you attribute a metric (coordinate choice) to a coordinate variable that you are seeking to measure? In what way does the model used to define this variable as something distinct from the product of a coordinate choice? Even restricted solely to Galilean relativity, in what way does this model distinguish the coordinate designation from the coordinate choice induced location of kinetic energy? It sounds to me like what is being asked for, without explicitly saying so, is a measurement proving which of two meteors classical kinetic energy resides in. That's absurd even under purely Galilean relativity.

These questions are highly non-trivial and must be addressed to even ask the question. You cannot impose coordinate dependence just because of some vague notion that Newtonian kinetic energy must have some specific location, which it did not even prior to Einstein. So why then attempt to impose on classical mechanics a frame independent location that classical mechanics could not provide prior to Einstein?

If you want a better answer provide a better specification of what it is you want measure. Distance is relational construct, like kinetic energy, as is time. Do you wish explicitly postulate that space and time are measurably independent of the mechanistic constructs we measure it with? I do not get, after all the explanation provided, why you would then ask me to characterize a claim of a variance without squat of a description of what that variance relates to. Do you not see that your question implies, without specifying so, an attempt to get me to say I can physically measure a mechanistic difference between two coordinate choices? Do you not see that being a coordinate choice is not even a different distance, but merely a conversion like English to metric?

Yet under some circumstances the same question is an actual physical effect, rather than a coordinate choice, and leads to very real differences. So why do you not specify the circumstances if it can obviously go either way depending on those circumstances? Just like with t coming back to a son older than yourself is a very real possibility. Are you trying to say, since a coordinate choice is not a physical effect, you can't possibly end up older than your son? Throwing out a raw variables (x,y,z,t) with 0 context and asking for an either/or is a strawman. A very boring strawman.
 
  • #108
my_wan said:
Of course, but look at what you have attributed the anisotropy to, the time component.
Then propose an alternative which:
A) has a non isotropic one way speed of light
B) has an isotropic two way speed if light equal to c
C) does not attribute the anisotropy to the time component

I am not aware of any such alternative, which is why I have claimed that choosing the one way speed off light is the same as specifying your synchronization convention. But if you are aware of alternatives then I would be glad to learn.
 
  • #109
DaleSpam said:
Then propose an alternative which:
A) has a non isotropic one way speed of light
B) has an isotropic two way speed if light equal to c
C) does not attribute the anisotropy to the time component

I am not aware of any such alternative, which is why I have claimed that choosing the one way speed off light is the same as specifying your synchronization convention. But if you are aware of alternatives then I would be glad to learn.
Though I doubt it the question sounds like you didn't get past the first sentence. It really makes no difference which variable you pick. Given the inverse relation between space and time isn't saying the time varied directionally the same as saying space varied directionally? When you said "nothing more than a change in simultaneity" in the original question, wasn't that equivalent to saying nothing more than a change in coordinate choices? Time and simultaneity are meaningless without a space over which it operates. So implicitly when you attached an operator to the time component you implied the inverse of that operator could equally well apply to the (x,y,z) components.

This is what I was getting at when I said "what do you mean [...]". This entails that the inverse of the anisotropic time component can equally be applied to the spatial component. Yet if applied to the spatial components it is wrong to also apply it to the time component in that same frame under SR. So which of those alternatives to you want to assume, or do you want to assume space and time are not precisely inversely related?

So that's 3 choices and the questions that's been asked of me didn't even explicitly specify one, even though I went over this already. Then when the test is objected to no specifications for what it is you presumed I thought the test was for in the first place. Yet I'm somehow supposed to psychically determine how to answer these questions again without any specification or acknowledgment, rebuttal, etc., of my repeated explanations.

Tell me I am allowed to assume GR and I'll tell exactly what I would expect the test I described to be able to accomplish, both in terms of anisotropic clock, distance, and a measure of ##c \neq 299,792,458 m/s##. But just say "it" can't be done tells me squat about what "it" is. What others have posited as anisotropy doesn't in itself make the claim any more meaningful than saying 1 inch ##\neq## 2.54cm because 1 < 2.54. Yet you still expect me to make an absolute claim about 1 and 2.54 without saying squat about what those 2 numbers represent. BS.
 
  • #110
my_wan said:
Given the inverse relation between space and time isn't saying the time varied directionally the same as saying space varied directionally?
Not if you want to keep the two-way speed of light isotropic and equal to c.

my_wan said:
So implicitly when you attached an operator to the time component you implied the inverse of that operator could equally well apply to the (x,y,z) components.
Go ahead and try it and see what happens to the two-way speed of light. Maybe you will find an example where you can change the spatial coordinates and not change the two-way speed of light, I don't have a rigorous proof that it cannot be done, I just have never seen it.
 
  • #111
I have been trying really hard to understand your experiment, my_wan, and then you made this comment in post #81:
my_wan said:
The setup in http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.6086 is sufficiently close to what I proposed to qualify the general idea, and expressed in reference [7] (Phys. Rev. D 45, 403–411 (1992)) therein. It summed up the point quiet well with:
I read both these papers and discovered that the first one was not claiming to measure the one-way speed of light and the second one which was claiming to measure the one-way speed of light, was later discredited, and when I pointed that out to you, you responded with another paper http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.4837, which I thought you were doing to buttress your position but it shows why it is impossible to measure the one-way speed of light because all such measurements involve "close paths".

So why do you keep referencing papers that you later denounce? Where is the paper that supports your claim that you know how to measure the one-way speed of light? I'm looking for the paper that you agree with 100% and will not denounce after I have read it and point out a discrepancy between it and your position.

Apparently, you think your measurement does not involve close paths, is this correct? Is this why all these papers have nothing to do with your idea (like the last one you referenced in post #107 which has absolutely nothing to do with anything in this thread)? Should I go back and try to understand your experiment to see if it has close paths?
 
  • #112
DaleSpam said:
Not if you want to keep the two-way speed of light isotropic and equal to c.

Go ahead and try it and see what happens to the two-way speed of light. Maybe you will find an example where you can change the spatial coordinates and not change the two-way speed of light, I don't have a rigorous proof that it cannot be done, I just have never seen it.

Just choose any frame as if it is the valid frame and define the constancy of c an observational illusion resulting from the inverse relation between space and time. Coming back to a son older than yourself then looks like the consequence of that anisotropy. Hence time still has to inversely relate to space regardless of which frame or coordinate choice you choose.

It's a pointless exercise in labeling a certain coordinate choice physically real while changing the frame (coordinate choice) under which it is meaningful. Yet it seems seems as though that what people often do when their talking about exceeding c so they can travel many light years faster. Speed c already let's you get there at the same time you left, yet it's sometimes not excepted as "real" because people appear to interpret it as though time dilation just give the illusion that you got there the same time you left. As if Earth is the real frame of reference.

So the fact that you can define these anisotropies in c and call the failure to measure it, like getting many light years in moments, as an illusion created by time dilation is both trivial and pointless.
 
  • #113
ghwellsjr said:
I have been trying really hard to understand your experiment, my_wan, and then you made this comment in post #81:

I read both these papers and discovered that the first one was not claiming to measure the one-way speed of light and the second one which was claiming to measure the one-way speed of light, was later discredited, and when I pointed that out to you, you responded with another paper http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.4837, which I thought you were doing to buttress your position but it shows why it is impossible to measure the one-way speed of light because all such measurements involve "close paths".
The first papers were not originally referenced by me, nor was I aware of them specifically till they were referenced here. The commonality exist only in the use of geometry rather than clock synchronization as the basis for the measurement. I thought that was sufficiently close unil it became obvious, from Perez et al that the comparison of speeds is going to match even if the speed of light differs.

ghwellsjr said:
So why do you keep referencing papers that you later denounce? Where is the paper that supports your claim that you know how to measure the one-way speed of light? I'm looking for the paper that you agree with 100% and will not denounce after I have read it and point out a discrepancy between it and your position.
I did not denounce the paper. The "close path" objection is valid. It is valid simply because if the the speed of light changed to some value v the comparing v/v still gives you 1 just like c/c.

ghwellsjr said:
Apparently, you think your measurement does not involve close paths, is this correct? Is this why all these papers have nothing to do with your idea (like the last one you referenced in post #107 which has absolutely nothing to do with anything in this thread)? Should I go back and try to understand your experiment to see if it has close paths?
You present the "close paths" disproof, pretend I'm denouncing a paper I am not, then state the reason I neither rebutted the "close paths" nor denounced the paper cited and ask me if I mean what I've been saying all this time.

Here is a picture:
 

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  • #114
Now looking at that picture, is it not obvious that given some rotation differing speeds of light will change the amount of light detected at the detector?
Is it not obvious that "closed paths" are not being used?
 
  • #115
my_wan said:
Just choose any frame as if it is the valid frame and define the constancy of c an observational illusion resulting from the inverse relation between space and time. Coming back to a son older than yourself then looks like the consequence of that anisotropy. Hence time still has to inversely relate to space regardless of which frame or coordinate choice you choose.
Huh? Can you show what you mean here with an example?
 
  • #116
my_wan said:
Now looking at that picture, is it not obvious that given some rotation differing speeds of light will change the amount of light detected at the detector?
Is it not obvious that "closed paths" are not being used?
Is it not obvious to you that the picture itself depends on the synchronization convention?
 
  • #117
DaleSpam said:
Huh? Can you show what you mean here with an example?

Do you mean to ask me to give an example of the fact that the physics is indepent of the coordinate choice? Newtonian physics restricted validity to a particular coordinate choice. Though Galilean transforms were allowed to translate between coordinate choices it was not always generally appreciated that these transforms allowed coordinate independence formulations in Newton's time. Ostensibly this wasn't a priority since it was so easy to presume simultaneity and space were absolute measurables. Relativity required these transforms to take center stage because the absolutes could not be maintained. Yet even with purely Galilean transforms the same coordinate independence required by relativity actually makes classical physics simpler.

Take the dilation factor ##\gamma##. In SR ##\gamma## apply to time from one perspective and space from another viewing the exact same physical system. It makes no physical difference whether you define the capacity at near c to travel to Alpha Centauri in a couple of hours a result of time dilation or spatial contraction, yet mathematically you can't both by ##\gamma## from a single frame and get the right answer. Either is fine, both is wrong. Just like it makes no difference classically which Galilean frame you chose so long as you mathematically maintain that choice, or explicitly provide the transform. Just like it makes no difference which of two meteors you assign the kinetic energy to, but you can't assign the total to both.

Is that example enough, simply choose ##\gamma## to operate on space in one case, and on time in an physically equivalent case?

DaleSpam said:
Is it not obvious to you that the picture itself depends on the synchronization convention?
Point it out to me, because I'm lost unless your want to make some absurd classical assumptions that cannot even stand scrutiny from a purely classical perspective.
Does it require the synchronization of two separate clocks? I say no, one single clock defining RPM, and one single yardstick defining the distance light has to travel to get detected before getting blocked. If, with sufficient resolution, you measure the speed of light as it travels straight down a gravitational potential then I fully expect it to appear as though ##c > c##. Pointed up a gravitational potential I fully expect it to measure ##c < c## with the same apparatus. If you think I expect c to differ from c in an otherwise inertial frame by virtue of some medium lacking inertial effects it would be absurd.

Suppose instead of choosing between operating on space or time with some ##\gamma## you chose a frame in which some fraction operated spatially and some fraction on time. This is allowed, but the problem is that is such cases ##\gamma_1 + \gamma_2## cannot add up to the original ##\gamma_{total}##. Is this unique to SR? No. If you choose a Galilean frame in which some fraction of ##e_k## is apportioned to both meteors then ##e_k + e_k## cannot add up to ##e_{k(total)}## as defined by the Galilean frame associated with either meteor.

It still seems to me that it is implicitly assumed that classical physics is coordinate independent, without recognizing that the formulation of it is in fact explicitly coordinate dependent. Then requiring me to physically measure the effects of a coordinate choice, due not to coordinate dependence, but rather a coordinate dependent formulation, in order to prove a one-way speed measure. I say no, it's an absurd distortion of logic. Yet the one-way measure is there nonetheless, even if it's not going to give a value other than c in an inertially uniform space.
 
  • #118
my_wan said:
Is that example enough, simply choose ##\gamma## to operate on space in one case, and on time in an physically equivalent case?
I was asking for a concrete example of a coordinate system which:
A) has a non isotropic one way speed of light
B) has an isotropic two way speed if light equal to c
C) does not attribute the anisotropy to the time component

I don't believe that such a system exists, but you seem to think that you could derive one from my example of post 105 simply by "the inverse relation between space and time". I don't get what you are saying with that, so a concrete example of such a coordinate transformation would be helpful.
 
  • #119
my_wan said:
Point it out to me
So, assume that we use the synchronization convention of post 105. Then the geometry of your tube changes as shown in the attachment.
 

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  • #120
DaleSpam said:
I was asking for a concrete example of a coordinate system which:
A) has a non isotropic one way speed of light
B) has an isotropic two way speed if light equal to c
C) does not attribute the anisotropy to the time component

I don't believe that such a system exists, but you seem to think that you could derive one from my example of post 105 simply by "the inverse relation between space and time". I don't get what you are saying with that, so a concrete example of such a coordinate transformation would be helpful.
In post #117 I give a very real and measurable example, involving a gravitational potential. Here's my problem with your request in general: When challenged to define a way to measure a one-way speed I mentioned how meaningless it was, but was challenged anyway. Then I'm accused of taking the physical meaning as somehow absolute. Then references are brought up to rebut it, so I allow variation to make it more clear. I'm then accused of accepting the reference as if it fully represented what I described. When I explained why it wasn't I was accused of rejecting the validity of the references. I explained again. In the meantime I was accussed of rejecting my own references, which were not even my own, but posted by others, nor did I reject their validity.

So, I can damn near guarantee that as soon as I submit to your request I will be accused of claiming it is absolutely real, and accused of trying to measure the this made up coordinate choice, then accused of rejecting my own coordinate your trying to demand I make up.

Now, if I've damn near written a book here trying to explain that a coordinate choice is not a physical choice. Yet your busy trying to goat me into constructing some BS coordinate choice for what? Unless the whole purpose is to somehow try to pin these BS accusations on me that I am somehow trying to defend the absolute physical reality of some BS coordinate choice. If there was a point I would do it anyway, yet it has no more of a point than a coordinate choice that puts the Earth at the center of the solar system.


DaleSpam said:
So, assume that we use the synchronization convention of post 105. Then the geometry of your tube changes as shown in the attachment.
And so why did you divert the debate, with a complete lack of a response, pages back where I explained why this was a moot issue? I'll say it again: The fact that you can choose another equally valid coordinate choice, i.e., choose a differing synchronization convention that is consistent with SR that gets the same results with Einstein's synchronization convention is just another non-physical coordinate choice. It is NOT a required coordinate choice to get the same physical prediction, only Galilean coordinates are required for that, even though the predictions are the same.

So unless you want to claim that this non-physical coordinate choice (synchronization convention) you have chosen is in fact a physical choice then so what. Only then you are stuck trying to explain why a purely Galilean coordinate choice gives the same answers. Hence this whole, it bends to create the illusion that a Galilean coordinate choice valid implies that a coordinate choice is a physical thing in itself.

The only challenge I signed up for was not to prove any coordinate choice was a physical thing, only that with a single clock and a single tape measure a one way speed of light could be measured. It is not my problem if you want to insist on a specific coordinate choice from which you decide it's absolute physical meaning is derived.
 
  • #121
Basically implicit in that last post of yours is the claim that the geometry you chose to represent it is somehow the absolute geometry of the system. That's about as much abuse of the principles of relativity as can be dished out. No such geometric distortions is required for valid predictions.
 
  • #122
my_wan said:
Then I'm accused of taking the physical meaning as somehow absolute. Then references are brought up to rebut it, so I allow variation to make it more clear. I'm then accused of accepting the reference as if it fully represented what I described. When I explained why it wasn't I was accused of rejecting the validity of the references. I explained again. In the meantime I was accussed of rejecting my own references, which were not even my own, but posted by others, nor did I reject their validity.

So, I can damn near guarantee that as soon as I submit to your request I will be accused of claiming it is absolutely real, and accused of trying to measure the this made up coordinate choice, then accused of rejecting my own coordinate your trying to demand I make up.
None of that was me. At this point I was just trying to find out if such a coordinate system is even possible (which I still doubt) and also understand your "inverse relationship" bit which doesn't make much sense to me from your verbal descriptions, despite repeated attempts.

If you had proposed a coordinate system I would certainly test it to see if it met those three conditions. If it did, I would have to revise my position, but if it did not then I would point it out and repeat my belief that it is not possible and suggest that you should revise your position.

my_wan said:
The only challenge I signed up for was ... only that with a single clock and a single tape measure a one way speed of light could be measured.
But this is what you have not done. The synchronization convention I used would result in the exact same experimental result from your device, but the one way speed of light is infinite in the +x direction and 1/2 c in the -x direction under that synchronization convention. So your device does not measure the one way speed of light. If you assume the one-way speed of light to be anything from 1/2 c to infinity then your device will confirm that assumption. This is because the spatial geometry depends on the synchronization convention.

my_wan said:
When challenged to define a way to measure a one-way speed I mentioned how meaningless it was, but was challenged anyway.
Sorry, I missed this. If you agree that it is meaningless to try to measure the one-way speed of light then we are in agreement. This whole conversation, from post 50 onward, was only a reaction to your claim of post 50 that your device could indeed measure the one way speed of light. If you now agree that the measurement is meaningless then we can end here with an apology from me for missing that comment.
 
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  • #123
my_wan said:
Basically implicit in that last post of yours is the claim that the geometry you chose to represent it is somehow the absolute geometry of the system.
There certainly is no such claim. The only claim is that the spatial geometry depends on the synchronization convention, which it clearly does.

This claim shouldn't be a surprising claim, it is right in line with standard SR fare like length contraction.
 
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  • #124
DaleSpam said:
There certainly is no such claim. The only claim is that the spatial geometry depends on the synchronization convention, which it clearly does.

This claim shouldn't be a surprising claim, it is right in line with standard SR fare like length contraction.

Ok then. Is this a claim that Cartesian coordinates are dependent on Einstein's synchronization convention?

As far as meaningless, along the same lines I said the only people who could possibly care is the Einstein is wrong crowd, and that such claims were based on some form on the a physical reality of coordinate choices.
 
  • #125
my_wan said:
Ok then. Is this a claim that Cartesian coordinates are dependent on Einstein's synchronization convention?
I don't know what you mean by this.

Considered as a 4D object independent of any coordinate system your rotating tube is a double helix. The claim that the tube is straight requires a very specific "slicing" of that helix. If you slice it on any other hypersurface then it is no longer straight.

This includes weird synchronization conventions discussed here, but it also includes any inertial frame (Einstein synchronization) where the COM of the tube is not at rest. Even in other inertial frames the tube is not straight. This is why I mentioned the other thread way back in post 52.

my_wan said:
As far as meaningless, along the same lines I said the only people who could possibly care is the Einstein is wrong crowd
I care and I am not among the Einstein is wrong crowd.
 
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  • #126
DaleSpam said:
I don't know what you mean by this.

Considered as a 4D object independent of any coordinate system your rotating tube is a double helix. The claim that the tube is straight requires a very specific "slicing" of that helix. If you slice it on any other hypersurface then it is no longer straight.

This includes weird synchronization conventions discussed here, but it also includes any inertial frame (Einstein synchronization) where the COM of the tube is not at rest. Even in other inertial frames the tube is not straight. This is why I mentioned the other thread way back in post 52.

I care and I am not among the Einstein is wrong crowd.
I'll address the coordinate issue further down, but I think there are some interpretation problems, on for both of us, that I should mention first.

I feel like my position points have been misrepresented in terms of some kind of "weird synchronization convention" in which I have little notion of the details of how this "weird convention" is supposed to be constructed, and can imagine a bewildering number of absurd but . Fine by itself if it was well defined, but I feel stuck in the position of trying to second guess some model when all I can do is try to qualify when certain notions presented can be contextually valid and when they can't. Hence it's essentially like trying to address a moving target. This is possibly creating an illusion of flip-flopping.


At the same time I think it's likely that some people are trying to interpret what I'm saying in the context of some preconceived notions of the context in which my claims are intended to have meaning. This entails that the fine critiques here are in no better shoes than I am in terms of how to proceed. The critiques cannot be blamed any more than myself. Now, how to proceed?

>>>I'll now attempt a (almost certainly incomplete) complete characterization of the issues.

Yes you are absolute correct that the claim that the tube is straight requires a very specific set of coordinate choices, as any coordinate choice involves certain topological assumptions. My main point is that choosing between a flat or curved topology doesn't in itself have physical meaning. You have chosen to point out that the Euclidean geometry I have chosen is equivalent to the curved topology you are mapping it with in this case. This is true enough by itself, but my point is that it makes no difference. You get the same answers irrespective of whether your coordinate choices involves a curved topology or not. Hence the fact that one perfectly valid coordinatization choice empirically maps to a second perfectly valid coordinatization choice does not prove one or the other coordinate choice is the one valid choice, or even that one is a required presumption of the other. In fact the coordinate choice in itself has no physical meaning at all.

Now, this issue of coordinate independence is complicated by certain notions of synchronization conventions. Yet if you accept that a coordinate choice is not in itself a choice of physical parameters then a valid synchronization convention is determined by empirical consistency with the coordinate choice used. If a synchronization convention is valid then we can fully expect to transform our coordinatization into equally valid curved topologies without implying any specific actual reality to a curved verses a flat coordinate choice.

The Experiment:
So now it's down to the question of what the experiment I described entails. Certainly, if and only if (IIF) Einstein's synchronization is physically valid generally (as I certainly fully expect), and I suggest a one-way light speed measurement that is (by definition) inconsistent with Einstein's synchronization, then something is absolutely wrong with the interpretation of the experimental design.

However, the question is not strictly whether Einstein's synchronization is valid or not, but whether I must presuppose that it is in order to perform such an experiment. To this question the answer is no, because I only a priori assumed flat Euclidean space with purely Galilean transforms using the ratio of a single clock to a single ruler. Hence, IIF the domain of validity of Einstein's synchronization can be truncated under these circumstances then the experiment will demonstrate that. The failure to demonstrate any inconsistency with Einstein's synchronization is therefore NOT a product of a presumption of Einstein's synchronization, but would merely be the result of the empirical validity of Einstein's synchronization.

The claim that I must empirically invalidate Einstein's synchronization in order not to presume it's validity a priori is simply not tenable. Though I think most of us know how absurd things could get if Einstein's synchronization was empirically invalidated by this experiment, and worth testing if for no other reason. As uninterested as I am, based on the apparently obvious validity of Einstein's synchronization, the empirical results are more meaningful than our sensibilities.

Ending Questions:
[1] If it is maintained that I have a priori presumed Einstein's synchronization in this experimental design, please explain in what way such a priori as assumptions where embedded in the design prior to obtaining results.

[2] If not [1] and it is maintained that the consistency of results with Einstein's synchronization automatically entails that this synchronization convention was a priori assumed, please explain how the empirical consequences of an experiment entails an a priori presumption of those results.

Otherwise it cannot be maintained that the empirical validity of Einstein's synchronization entails the a priori assumption of its validity, or that this argument is sufficient to claim the experimental design I outlined contains such a priori assumptions. Of course you may beg to differ, but please at least address these issues in the rebuttal, if for no other reason than to articulate why they are irrelevant.
 
  • #127
my_wan said:
I feel like my position points have been misrepresented in terms of some kind of "weird synchronization convention" in which I have little notion of the details of how this "weird convention" is supposed to be constructed, and can imagine a bewildering number of absurd but . Fine by itself if it was well defined, but I feel stuck in the position of trying to second guess some model when all I can do is try to qualify when certain notions presented can be contextually valid and when they can't. Hence it's essentially like trying to address a moving target. This is possibly creating an illusion of flip-flopping.
That is why I provided an explicit example in post 105 and asked you for a counter-example when you objected. Post 105 was a specific concrete example of a possible "weird synchronization convention" under which the one-way speed of light was not c.

Personally, I think that you are not flip-flopping but that you have just not worked through this completely so you are unaware of some of the issues and background.

my_wan said:
You have chosen to point out that the Euclidean geometry I have chosen is equivalent to the curved topology you are mapping it with in this case. This is true enough by itself, but my point is that it makes no difference. You get the same answers irrespective of whether your coordinate choices involves a curved topology or not.
This statement is only true if the questions are such that the answers are coordinate independent. The question of the one-way speed of light is not such a question.

You have spoken about "physical meaning", "physically valid", and "physically real". I generally stay away from such terms. However, I would submit to you that if you believe that a coordinate choice has no physical meaning then a question whose answer depends on the coordinate choice should also be designated as having no physical meaning.

my_wan said:
[1] If it is maintained that I have a priori presumed Einstein's synchronization in this experimental design, please explain in what way such a priori as assumptions where embedded in the design prior to obtaining results.
The assumption is embedded in the shape of the device, as I have shown above.

my_wan said:
Of course you may beg to differ, but please at least address these issues in the rebuttal, if for no other reason than to articulate why they are irrelevant.
I didn't address [2] since it started out "if not [1]", and I assert [1].
 
  • #128
That you assume I haven't worked through these issues is a reasonable assumption, however much I might disagree. Of course it's not too hard to be wrong when reworked enough. My biggest deficit is not the lack of working through these issues myself, but in bothering with articulating how to express what I have worked through in terms of every possible conceptual model variation others might hold value in. I don't think any of us can fully appreciate the conceptual differences people might hold, with or without actual empirical incongruence.

I made a long post and deleted it to get to the core issue below.

The assumption is embedded in the shape of the device, as I have shown above.
Yet your shape requires a coordinate choice in which the time varies at each point in the space of the experiment. Yet if you assume it is completely flat, i.e., a purely Galilean frame with a constant t across the whole space of the apparatus, the empirical results remain with or without the results justifying your coordinate dependent topological curvature. Hence you have not shown that the shape you describe is anything more than an artifact of your coordinate choice, i.e., a coordinate dependent claim.

That is why I started with a purely Galilean frame, a global absolute t, one clock, and one ruler to avoid this a priori assumption. I therefore get the same experimental results IIF (if and only if) Einstein's synchronization is strictly valid. Hence the a priori assumption that the shape you defined is a valid coordinate choice is determined by the empirical outcome, not on my presumption that a universal time doesn't exist.

DaleSpam said:
I didn't address [2] since it started out "if not [1]", and I assert [1].
Yes you did, thanks. Yet it is a repeat of a previous statement, so the above response repeats the unnecessary coordinate dependence of your shape assumption, via a position dependent t. Whereas I started with a flat space and a global t and ONLY justify the validity of your coordinate choice IIF the empirical results agree. Regardless of how absurd it would be to presume it wouldn't empirically agree.

However reasonable the presumption, it is you who is making the a priori assumption that it will empirically agree in order to claim I required those presumption in order to get the empirical results to agree. Where is it in the desin (not coordinate choice). It's not in the variable t, since that is assumed globally uniform. It's not in the shape, since I'm using global flatness as the basis for comparing empirical results to. It's not in the synchronization of a pair of clocks, since I only have one clock. It's not in the presumption that two length measurements are equal, because I only have one straight length to measure.

So the rebuttal requires something more than a coordinate dependent claim that the topology is curved.
 
  • #129
That you assume I haven't worked through these issues is a reasonable assumption, however much I might disagree. Of course it's not too hard to be wrong and reworking more is always warranted. My biggest deficit is not the lack of working through these issues myself, but in bothering with articulating how to express what I have worked through in terms of every possible conceptual model variation others might hold value in. I don't think any of us can fully appreciate the conceptual differences people might hold, with or without actual empirical incongruence.

I made a long post and deleted it to get to the core issue below.

The assumption is embedded in the shape of the device, as I have shown above.
Yet your shape requires a coordinate choice in which the time varies at each point in the space of the experiment. Yet if you assume it is completely flat, i.e., a purely Galilean frame with a constant t across the whole space of the apparatus, the empirical results remain with or without the results justifying your coordinate dependent topological curvature. Hence you have not shown that the shape you describe is anything more than an artifact of your coordinate choice, i.e., a coordinate dependent claim.

That is why I started with a purely Galilean frame, a global absolute t, one clock, and one ruler to avoid this a priori assumption. I therefore get the same experimental results IIF (if and only if) Einstein's synchronization is strictly valid. Hence the a priori assumption that the shape you defined is a valid coordinate choice is determined by the empirical outcome, not on my presumption that a universal time doesn't exist.

DaleSpam said:
I didn't address [2] since it started out "if not [1]", and I assert [1].
Yes you did, thanks. Yet it is a repeat of a previous statement, so the above response repeats the unnecessary coordinate dependence of your shape assumption, via a position dependent t. Whereas I started with a flat space and a global t and ONLY justify the validity of your coordinate choice IIF the empirical results agree. Regardless of how absurd it would be to presume it wouldn't empirically agree.

However reasonable the presumption, it is you who is making the a priori assumption that it will empirically agree in order to claim I required those presumption in order to get the empirical results to agree. Where is it in the design (not coordinate choice). It's not in the variable t, since that is assumed globally uniform. It's not in the shape, since I'm using global flatness as the basis for comparing empirical results to. It's not in the synchronization of a pair of clocks, since I only have one clock. It's not in the presumption that two length measurements are equal, because I only have one straight length to measure.

So the rebuttal requires something more than a coordinate dependent claim that the topology is curved.
 
  • #130
Can you decide which of your two previous posts you prefer and delete the other?
 
  • #131
my_wan said:
My biggest deficit is not the lack of working through these issues myself, but in bothering with articulating how to express what I have worked through
That is certainly possible. Your use of standard terminology is very non-standard and confusing. For example:

my_wan said:
a coordinate dependent claim that the topology is curved.
Topology introduces concepts like continuity and connectedness, not distances, angles, or curvature. In order to get curvature you need a metric space, not just a topological space. So you would say that the manifold is curved since a manifold is a topological space with an associated metric, or you could even say that the metric is curved. However, the curvature of a manifold is not a coordinate dependent claim, it is coordinate independent. So this whole phrase is very confusing and non-standard.

my_wan said:
Hence you have not shown that the shape you describe is anything more than an artifact of your coordinate choice, i.e., a coordinate dependent claim.
Correct, the shape I described is coordinate dependent. So is the shape you described. They are both individual cases of an infinite number of equally valid shapes, each of which depend on the coordinates chosen.

my_wan said:
the above response repeats the unnecessary coordinate dependence of your shape assumption, via a position dependent t. Whereas I started with a flat space and a global t
When we say "A depends on B" we mean that if you change B then A also changes.

As I demonstrated, when you change coordinates (B) then the shape also changes (A). Therefore the shape (A) depends on the coordinates (B). The fact that you "started with a flat space and a global t" is completely irrelevant as to whether or not the shape depends on the coordinates. The flatness or globalness of A and B simply doesn't enter into the definition of "A depends on B".
 
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  • #132
I went to bed after that last post, now I'm unable to delete either one. The connection timed out when posting so I checked to see if it posted before reposting and apparently didn't see it somehow. Anybody with the authority is welcome to delete either they so choose.

DaleSpam said:
As I demonstrated, when you change coordinates (B) then the shape also changes (A). Therefore the shape (A) depends on the coordinates (B). The fact that you "started with a flat space and a global t" is completely irrelevant as to whether or not the shape depends on the coordinates. The flatness or globalness of A and B simply doesn't enter into the definition of "A depends on B".
Main Argument:
What you have done is a mapping of A to B, a coordinate transform, and then you say that "A depends on B". This is absolutely true for any valid mapping of A to B. The question is whether this mapping is valid in every respect, as we have every reason to believe it is. Yet, in starting with a flat space using Galilean transforms and a global t, I'm not required to presume a priori that the mapping is entirely valid in the context of one-way speeds or otherwise. Yet in order for you to claim A is a consequence of B you must make this presumption that I have not required.

The reason this presumption is not required is because if you start with strictly Cartesian coordinates with purely Galilean transforms then the validity of the mapping A to B depends on the character of the inertial properties of the space, such as Newtonian absolutes verses relative, or any empirically accessible property thereof like (unlikely) one-way light speeds. Change these relational properties in some empirically accessible way and the the mapping A to B must change accordingly. Hence the claim that "A depends on B" is essentially a post hoc ergo propter hoc argument.

Other Issues:
As I've stated, I see no real reason to be terribly interested in this experiment due to the primary issues it addresses are those that claim Einstein is wrong. Though it can also address inverse conceptual issues with how some perceive the distinctions between Einstein's relativity and Galilean relativity. In fact the thing SR changes has nothing to do with Newtonian mechanics, only the Newtonian assumption of some preferred Galilean frame that was only possible to justify as a result of the linearity of Newtonian time. Yet if time itself is the result of a mechanistic process it can't possibly be a universal constant.

In terms of the specific claims you hear, like one way speeds can't be measured due to the requirement of synchronizing a pair of clocks, it is relevant and takes away the last thread that the anti-Einstein crowd can hang onto. It also removes this notion that somehow relativity is fundamentally inconsistent with Newtonian mechanics, as distinct from the claims of absolute space and time, i.e., coordinate dependence. Classical thermodynamics remains coordinate dependent to this day, with loads of debate over extensive properties.

Let's look closer at the source of the "A depends on B" and clock synchronization claims.
PhilSci preprint linked: Clock synchronization, a universal light speed, and the terrestrial red-shift experiment
American Journal of Physics, Volume 51, Issue 9, pp. 795-797 (1983).

[PLAIN]http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/4863/ said:
But[/PLAIN] the Hafele-Keating experiment [1] and muon decay experiments which measure time dilation [2] show that a universal time does not exist, and so the notion of separated synchronized clocks can have no a priori meaning. It follows that the speed of light can have no meaning until a definition of synchronized clocks is given. It is not simply that the speed cannot be measured; it can have no meaning.
(Italics original)

Now in principle, since universal time (like speed) is not just non-existent but lacks meaning altogether, entails that (like a coordinate choice) it makes no difference what synchronization convention you use, flat, curved, or whatever, but the physical results must be consistent regardless. Just like Galilean transforms do not need the extra baggage of absolute space and time, under which laws of physics are valid only for some choice of Galilean frame. Both the denial of Einstein's relativity and the denial that it is consistent with Galilean relativity given a locally constant c entails the same error.

This of course fully and absolutely justifies DaleSpam's presumptions that A maps to B. Yet does not justify the claim that, lacking prior knowledge the independence of space and time to universal absolute metric, of which not even c is an absolute constant, "A depends on B". The claim A depends on B itself depends on the absents of universal absolute metrics.

Now further down it states:
[PLAIN]http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/4863/ said:
This[/PLAIN] one-way speed requires two clocks, and to be meaningful, the clocks must be synchronized.
Yet as this article already stated the synchronization convention cannot make a difference if the labeling of t has no meaning in itself whatsoever. The labeling of t is what defines the meaning, just as it is what defines the difference between a flat and a curved geometry. Thus if you choose the two clocks in the described test it corresponds to the assumption that t was consistent with a universal time over all space. Yet the most obvious presumable results is that no such universal time exist, i.e., no difference between one a two way light speeds. Yet synchronization of clock pairs was NOT required a priori that was inconsistent with a universal time. Neither can the failure to maintain a one-way speed anisotropy in an inertially flat plane of space be blamed on an a prior synchronization convention chosen that was inconsistent with universal space or time. I started with one synchronization convention, globally absolute, and fully expect results that disavow the global absolutes its presumptions were predicated on. Hence it is a true test, however trivial it for those who already see the obvious, that no such absolute metric exist.

This lack of absolute metrics applies equally as well to those who would assume that Einstein's synchronization convention must be incompatible with alternate synchronization conventions. This is the very meaning of the statement that synchronization definition is not simply non-existent in nature, it can have no meaning whatsoever without the definition. The synchronization convention has no more a preferred status, beyond the simplification of the formalism, than a coordinate choice or a preferred frame. This extends to the lack of preferred Galilean frames in classical physics as well. We have simply moved from preferred frames in classical physics to preferred synchronization conventions in Relativity, neither of which has any 'absolute' meaning. This goes for those supposed extensive properties in classical thermodynamics as well, where the mean field limits and associated state variables, and the ensembles derived thereof, are tied to a unique Galilean (preferred) frame.
 
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  • #133
my_wan said:
What you have done is a mapping of A to B, a coordinate transform, and then you say that "A depends on B". This is absolutely true for any valid mapping of A to B.
OK, so you agree that the spatial shape of the device depends on your coordinate choice.

my_wan said:
Yet, in starting with a flat space using Galilean transforms and a global t, I'm not required to presume a priori that the mapping is entirely valid in the context of one-way speeds or otherwise.
You may or may not presume that my mapping is valid, that is your perogative. The point is that you made an assumption ("global t") and the thing you said you were measuring depends on that assumption. Whether or not any other assumptions are valid, the thing you claim to be measuring depends on the assumption. You are therefore not measuring it but assuming it.

Here is an analogy of the error you are making. Suppose I was building a device to measure the two way speed of light. My device consists of a light source, detector, and clock all colocated and a mirror some distance away. I flash the bulb and measure the time to see the reflection. The distance to the mirror is given by d=2t/c and the measured speed of light is given by 2t/d. You complain "but your measurement depends on the value of c you use to calculate d, if you change that value you get a different result". I reply, "I am not required to presume a priori that any other value of c is valid, in fact, there is a large body of evidence showing that no other value of c is valid". You reply, "whether or not any other assumptions are valid, the value you claim to be measuring still depends on the assumption you are making, you are therefore not measuring it but assuming it".
 
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  • #134
DaleSpam said:
OK, so you agree that the spatial shape of the device depends on your coordinate choice.
Yes, exactly as my original claim stated.

DaleSpam said:
You may or may not presume that my mapping is valid as you please.
Here you make it sound as if an operation assumption in the setup is an assumption of the converse. It's not, that's what the empirical results, which have yet to be obtained, are to determine.

DaleSpam said:
The point is that you made an assumption ("global t") and the thing you said you were measuring depends on that assumption.
No, the absolute validity of that assumption, not the assumption itself, is what the empirical results depends on. If what I measure only depends on the assumption of an globally uniform t that is uniquely valid then that assumption is invalidated by the expected empirical results when those results fail to justify this assumption uniquely.

You cannot say the results of a "global t" assumption depends on that assumption when the results are fully expected to be entirely consistent with a non-global t. In other words the outcome is independent of your assumption of global t or not, just like physics is independent of your coordinate choice.

DaleSpam said:
Whether or not any other assumptions are valid, the thing measured still depends on the assumption.
No. If the measurement depended on the global t assumption it by definition precludes justification of a non-global t as you chose, only it will. Instead it will fully justify the non-global t just as well, IIF as we know it will the speed c is constant one-way. The results are independent of choice of defining t, just like coordinate independence.

Repeat bottom line: I made the assumption of a global t, you made the assumption t varied over the same space, yet we get the same results. Hence the result is independent of the global verses non-global t assumption. Therefore it cannot be said that the measurement is dependent on a global t, since the actual results fully justify a non-global t. An assumption does not justify itself by justifying the opposite.
 
  • #135
DaleSpam said:
Here is an analogy of the error you are making. Suppose I was building a device to measure the two way speed of light. My device consists of a light source, detector, and clock all colocated and a mirror some distance away. I flash the bulb and measure the time to see the reflection. The distance to the mirror is given by d=2t/c and the measured speed of light is given by 2t/d. You complain "but your measurement depends on the value of c you use to calculate d, if you change that value you get a different result". I reply, "I am not required to presume a priori that any other value of c is valid, in fact, there is a large body of evidence showing that no other value of c is valid". You reply, "whether or not any other assumptions are valid, the value you claim to be measuring still depends on the assumption you are making, you are therefore not measuring it but assuming it".

I have given very specific circumstances under which it is flat out wrong to presume the speed of light is constant, and involves any accelerated system. In fact the described measurement can in principle actually measure this non c of c.
 
  • #136
my_wan, thanks a lot for your clear answers and the clever thought experiment in this thread from #50 till the last one, I fully agree with you. And you are the most patient person I know too.
Take a look at the parallel thread about one-way light speed measurement(you probably already have) where thanks to Pallen a reasonable conclusion has been reached in line with what you are saying:the posibility of measuring it is a condition of falsifiability of the SR theory.
 
  • #137
Welcome back TrickyDicky!
 
  • #138
my_wan said:
No, the absolute validity of that assumption, not the assumption itself, is what the empirical results depends on.
This is not correct. I took your same device, made a different assumption, and got a device that would measure an infinite one-way speed of light. The result you obtain from the experiment depends on the assumption itself.

The unprocessed data that you are getting from your proposed experiment is some brightness measure as a function of the angular velocity. You then take some feature of that curve, e.g. the RPM of the peak brightness, and you mathematically convert that value to a measurement of the speed of light. In order to make that conversion you must make an assumption about the shape of the device as it rotates, and that assumption completely determines the value that you get for your conversion, anywhere from .5 c to infinity.
 
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  • #139
DaleSpam said:
This is not correct. I took your same device, made a different assumption, and got a device that would measure an infinite one-way speed of light. The result you obtain from the experiment depends on the assumption itself.
Wait a minute. You just claimed claimed to have gotten an empirical experimental result from your raw math! You must be badly misinterpreting what I mean by a "result".

There are two ways I can assume you did this. The first, and most reasonable, would allow you to take this theoretical infinite speed curve at differing RPMs and compare it to the actual measured curves, which cannot be had without performing the experiment, and determined their rate of divergence.

The second, and rather absurd, approach that you seem to be implying is tantamount to assigning t=0 for the emission and detection of any given photon. The empirical results, not your assumption which you can calculate with, is the change in the total number of photons as the RPM is steadily increased. The curve this is compared to is the expected rate at which the total number of photons detected per revolution decreases. How fast the two curves diverge is determined by the speed of light in that one Galilean frame for which RPM is defined.

DaleSpam said:
The unprocessed data that you are getting from your proposed experiment is some brightness measure as a function of the angular velocity. You then take some feature of that curve, e.g. the RPM of the peak brightness, and you mathematically convert that value to a measurement of the speed of light. In order to make that conversion you must make an assumption about the shape of the device as it rotates, and that assumption completely determines the value that you get for your conversion, anywhere from .5 c to infinity.
In red badly missed the mark. Let me go through this again, as I try to unmangle the MaxEnt mixture of... I don't know what it is.

There is NO peak brightness, unless the contraption is not even turned on to perform any test. Peak brightness is 0 RPM if the rod is oriented in a certain direction.

You have a light source. It enters a hollow hole to be detected at the other end. If the light is not fast enough to get to the other end before the 1 cm^2 detector, the same size as the hole, moves past the area that the light will be detected.

I'm going to speak in terms of counting individual photons for the sake of simplicity.

Let's say the length of the pipe is 1 m. The hollow light tunnel is 1 cm^2, and is square not round, to linearize the change in detected photons as the RPM increases, assuming an infinite c. Now, if the speed of light is infinite, the decrease in the number of photons being detected per revolution is simply a function of the amount of time the total paths to the detector remains available. From this you mathematically plot on a curve in 1 RPM increments between 1 and say 30,000 RPM, under the assumption that the speed of light in infinite. This is 30,000 data points, and this is merely the reference curve the actual results will be compared against. No actual results are available as yet.

Now we need the empirical data curve to compare this to. For this you start at 1 RPM and measure number of photon detected per revolution. Then step through the next 29,999 RPM increments. This is your empirical data curve, which you cannot possibly have done on your computer, pencil and paper, or whatever. By having a regression of data points this way it's possible to get exquisitely sensitive measurements from relatively dirty data, much like the pioneer anomaly data capable of resolving an effect on the order of the Hubble expansion within the solar system. 30,000 data points is almost certainly overkill, but so what.

Now the divergence, over this entire range of RPM, from the infinite speed reference curve defines the speed of light. The noise in any given data point can then be washed out by fitting it to the progression of data. No one data point, corresponding to any given RPM, has any real importance whatsoever. Even less relevant is some "peak brightness" at any RPM.

The notion that your computer (or pencil) generated these necessarily conditions to obtain these empirical results is absurd.

>>>>
I say I'm not interested in this. This remains so in terms of your basic one-way light speed arguments, but to my knowledge no anisotropy in light speed has ever been measured in terms of GR either. Though it is perfectly allowed in principle by GR. A WAG can be posited that this could even play some role in the recent FTL neutrinos, though not something that is fitting to derail here with. Nonetheless, this design can in principle measure GR induced anisotropies in c, which have been acknowledged by and since Einstein. Though no method has to my knowledge been suggested to measure it directly.
 
  • #140
my_wan said:
The second, and rather absurd, approach that you seem to be implying is tantamount to assigning t=0 for the emission and detection of any given photon.
Not t=0, but Δt=0 for photons moving in the +x direction. That is a synchronization convention corresponding to an infinite one way speed of light in the +x direction.

Regarding the rest of your post, fine there is not a peak brightness, but there is still a brightness as a function of the RPM and you calculate the corresponding "measurement" of the one way speed of light from that function. The calculation you use to obtain the value of c depends not only on the measured brightness v RPM function but also on the assumed geometry of your device at different speeds (which is coordinate dependent). So the same brightness v RPM curve can be made to fit any one-way speed of light under an appropriate choice of coordinates.
 
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  • #141
DaleSpam said:
Not t=0, but Δt=0 for photons moving in the +x direction. That is a synchronization convention corresponding to an infinite one way speed of light in the +x direction.
Still not sure why you used any variable t at all, except as implied by the RPM.

DaleSpam said:
Regarding the rest of your post, fine there is not a peak brightness, but there is still a brightness as a function of the RPM and you calculate the corresponding "measurement" of the one way speed of light from that function.
But you are ignoring the paucity of required variables and instead using "as a function of: as if the variables of the function justify your statement independent of what the variables entail.

DaleSpam said:
The calculation you use to obtain the value of c depends not only on the measured brightness v RPM function but also on the assumed geometry of your device at different speeds (which is coordinate dependent).
No, it gets the same result no matter which geometry or coordinate choice you use. Hence it is coordinate independent, and synchronization conventions are themselves a form of coordinate choice in which you still get coordinate independent speeds. You CANNOT get any speed other than c by any coordinate or synchronization choice for exactly the same reason you cannot make 1 inch bigger by calling it 2.54 cm.

Yet you still misrepresent the measurement itself. The variables consist of RPM, 1 meter, and 1 cm, from which all else is a purely Newtonian space and defines all variables. Not even the intrinsic brightness of the light source makes any difference, so long as it's constant. The measured brightness v RPM function is insufficient, and requires a divergence of that function to a reference function taken from the variables above.

And Most Importantly:
Changing the geometry does NOT have any effect on the measured speed of light!

I have gone to great lengths to provide multiple reasons why in multiple different logical frameworks to make it clear. Yet your response contains no attempt at justification beyond a repeat of the same claims. It would be helpful if some explanation beyond the claim itself was provided, as well as more justification for the denial of my point. A mere repeat of claims gives me no basis for intuiting what you might see wrong with my rebuttal, formulating a better explanation, or having any clue whatever why extensive and multiple explanations are rebutted with a mere repeat of a claim.

DaleSpam said:
So the same brightness v RPM curve can be made to fit any one-way speed of light under an appropriate choice of coordinates.
Absolutely not. This is the entire point of me obtaining a coordinate independent result from a coordinate choice that many consider incompatible with the curved geometry of the relativity of rigidity.

You CANNOT get any other speed of c or (an)isotropy of c by choosing different coordinate choices or synchronization conventions unless something is wrong with SR, without breaking the legitimate transforms. Breaking legitimate transforms is tantamount to claiming 2 inches cannot possibly be bigger than 2.54 cm, or that object A is bigger than itself. Relativity maintained this by the simply principle that the order of events could not be causally reversed.

You have no obligation to agree, but if you have an argument that is valid I really want to hear it rather than a repeat of claims. If your argument is sound enough I will gladly say: "Oops, you win", but it has to be presented.
 
  • #142
my_wan said:
synchronization conventions are themselves a form of coordinate choice in which you still get coordinate independent speeds.
This is eggregiously false. A speed is some |Δx/Δt|. If you have two different synchronization conventions then they will in general disagree about the Δt and therefore about the speed.

my_wan said:
And Most Importantly:
Changing the geometry does NOT have any effect on the measured speed of light!
Sure it does. If the tube is not straight then you will get a different brightness/RPM curve for each possible speed of light compared to the same curves if it is straight. As you have pointed out many times, the "pure geometry" is what does everything in this device. Change the geometry and you change the measurement. You cannot have it both ways, you cannot claim that the geometry does everything for you and that the geometry doesn't have any effect.

I will tell you what. If you would find it convincing then why don't you mathematically derive your brightness v RPM curve for your straight tube under the standard "global t" for two or three possible different values of the one way speed of light. I will do the same for a different synchronization convention (similar to post 105, but not that extreme) and show how the different geometry of the new synchronization convention gives the same brightness v RPM curves for different values of the one way speed of light.
 
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  • #143
DaleSpam said:
Sure it does. If the tube is not straight then you will get a different brightness/RPM curve for each possible speed of light compared to the same curves if it is straight. As you have pointed out many times, the "pure geometry" is what does everything in this device. Change the geometry and you change the measurement.

But changing the geometry entails changing t at each point along the curve. Hence t is what changes with respect to the coordinate choice rather than the measurement outcome itself. This claim is so simplistic as to be tantamount to saying changing your velocity changes your measurement of c. That's not right either for the exact same reason, because changing your velocity changes the t interval over your path relative to the path associated with your initial velocity.

Only in the experimental case described the change in coordinates did not correspond to any physical changes to the system whatsoever, for any given reference data point to empirical data point pairs.

It's this simple: You can change t over some space of empirical events and all you have to do to keep measurement physically consistent, i.e., not "change the measurement" outcome, is change where that event was in relation to when that event was. Hence the outcome is no longer tied to how you choose to define t or the space. For inertially flat space you merely have to keep the same relative relation between space and time to avoid changing the measurement. Which is why when to changed t in your coordinate choice you had to change the definition of the geometry itself in order to keep a constant c. Which is why it is equivalent to, and does not change the measurement, as a result of this coordinate transform.

It's the same basic inverse space/time relation both SR and GR depend on. When you travel from Earth to some station 1 light hour away from Earth in 10 minutes it's not because you exceeded light speed. For you it's because the station was positioned much closer to Earth that is was from the Earth frame. From the Earth frame you got there at a much later t and your apparent t is attributed slow clocks on your ship. Space and time covary to maintain c. Hence when you relabeled t in the experiment you had to relabel spatial coordinates as though it was a curved geometry to keep the exact same resulting measurement in a system which no actual physical changes occurred. Only your coordinates did.

I repeated it so many ways because I am at a loss as to how SR, much less GR, can be comprehended without knowing this already.
 
  • #144
my_wan said:
But changing the geometry entails changing t at each point along the curve.
Of course, that is what a synchronization convention is.

my_wan said:
This claim is so simplistic as to be tantamount to saying changing your velocity changes your measurement of c. That's not right either for the exact same reason, because changing your velocity changes the t interval over your path relative to the path associated with your initial velocity.
That is true only for the Einstein synchronization convention. The rest of your comments similarly apply only to a coordinate system established using the Einstein synchronization convention.

my_wan said:
I repeated it so many ways because I am at a loss as to how SR, much less GR, can be comprehended without knowing this already.
Perhaps you don't realize it, but there are many quantities which are independent of the coordinate system and many which are dependent on the coordinate system. The one way speed of light is one of the coordinate dependent types.
 
  • #145
DaleSpam said:
Of course, that is what a synchronization convention is.

That is true only for the Einstein synchronization convention. The rest of your comments similarly apply only to a coordinate system established using the Einstein synchronization convention.
So you have just claimed that purely Newtonian mechanics with purely Galilean transforms assumes the Einstein synchronization convention. That wasn't a question.

DaleSpam said:
Perhaps you don't realize it, but there are many quantities which are independent of the coordinate system and many which are dependent on the coordinate system. The one way speed of light is one of the coordinate dependent types.
Yet again I'm left with nothing but a repeat of a raw authoritative claim, with that authority backed up with a maybe I don't realize I have 10 toes to match my 10 fingers.
 
  • #146
my_wan said:
Yet again I'm left with nothing but a repeat of a raw authoritative claim, with that authority backed up with a maybe I don't realize I have 10 toes to match my 10 fingers.
I assume that is a strangely worded request for references.

The best reference is Zhang, "Special Relativity and Its Experimental Foundations". E.g. Section 1.3.2 "we want to stress here is that only the two-way speed, but not the one-way speed, of light has been already measured in the experimental measurements, and hence the isotropy of the one-way velocity of light is just a postulate. ... a more general postulate, a choice of the anisotropy of the one-way velocity of light, together with the principle of relativity, would give the same physical predictions."

Since the more general postulate would give the same physical predictions, any experimental result which is predicted with an isotropic one-way speed of light equal to c is also predicted with an anisotropic one-way speed of light not equal to c.

See also Edwards, Am. J. Phys. 31 (1963), pg 482, which is the original source for the relevant section of Zhang.
 
  • #147
DaleSpam said:
I assume that is a strangely worded request for references.

It was a reference to the authoritative (lacking content) rebuttal, so you have deferred the same. I have repeatedly asked for an explanation rather than raw claims. However, I will run with this.

DaleSpam said:
The best reference is Zhang, "Special Relativity and Its Experimental Foundations". E.g. Section 1.3.2 "we want to stress here is that only the two-way speed, but not the one-way speed, of light has been already measured in the experimental measurements, and hence the isotropy of the one-way velocity of light is just a postulate. ... a more general postulate, a choice of the anisotropy of the one-way velocity of light, together with the principle of relativity, would give the same physical predictions."
Noted: You address the red letters next, but before I respond to that let me quote you on what lead us here.

DaleSpam said:
OK, so you agree that the spatial shape of the device depends on your coordinate choice.
[...]
The point is that you made an assumption ("global t") and the thing you said you were measuring depends on that assumption.
[...]
The point is that you made an assumption ("global t") and the thing you said you were measuring depends on that assumption.

To this I give an extensive explanation for why coordinate choices have no physical meaning and CANNOT give physical predictions. Only you claimed it does in post #142. Yet you finished the same post by saying differing synchronization convention gives the same brightness v RPM curves for different values of the one way speed of light.

Are here we are a step back, with me saying same physical predictions and you effectively claiming a coordinate choice changes the predicted speed of light. Does changing from feet to inches make my house 12x bigger? Yet here you are quoting from external sources exactly what I've been saying.

DaleSpam said:
Since the more general postulate would give the same physical predictions, any experimental result which is predicted with an isotropic one-way speed of light equal to c is also predicted with an anisotropic one-way speed of light not equal to c.
Exactly, because you are not describing a differing theory, only a differing coordinate choice. Insisting that the anisotropic coordinate transform entails a directional speed of light is exactly like insisting that the ##k_e## of a pair of meteors MUST be located only at the first meteor if you choose a coordinate with an origin at the second meteor. That BS. It's the same BS that got physics in trouble with Newtonian aether theories to begin with.

Now, when I said "Changing the geometry does NOT have any effect on the measured speed of light!", you responded with "Sure it does." Post #142. Yet you say in the same post "...different geometry of the new synchronization convention gives the same brightness v RPM curves for different values of the one way speed of light." So let's take your differing c as somehow physically meaning, however absurd it may to to assign physical significance to a coordinate choice. What in fact your claim entails is that my coordinate choice gives the proper speed of light, whereas yours gives an invalid speed of light. Why, exactly because SR is constructed in such a way that c is constant under Galilean kinematics. In fact, as I'll show, your curved geometry defined this way is off by ##c'\theta = \frac{c}{1 + \beta \: cos\theta}##.

DaleSpam said:
See also Edwards, Am. J. Phys. 31 (1963), pg 482, which is the original source for the relevant section of Zhang.
So let's look at where it is the formula I just gave and Edwards paper operate with came from, called the Sagnac effect. Let's look at where this anisotropy from a rotating frame and see where it comes from.
Noninvariant one-way speed of light and locally equivalent reference frames
Found. Phys. Lett. 10, 73-83 (1997).

Using 3 points, ##i = (1,2,3)##, in the full rotation of a frame then ##t_{0i} = t_i F_1(v,a)##. For light propagating in the opposite direction as the rotation distance is smaller by ##L_0 - x = \omega R(t_{02} - t_{01})##, such that ##L_0 - x = c(t_{02} - t_{01})##. This gives us ##t_{02} - t_{01} = \frac{L_0}{c(1 + \beta)}##. The RHS is you standard one way light speed transform, inverted for the opposite direction.

Here, since this clearly indicates that this one way speed is defined by ##t_{02} - t_{01}##, and t has no a priori meaning whatsoever, not that it can't be measured but none whatsoever, then neither does ##t_{02} - t_{01}## or your one way speed. So does this mean this effect cannot be measured. No! That is exactly what the Sagnac effect is! This effect must also be accounted for in GPS synchronization, Y. Saburi et al., IEEE Trans. IM25, 473 (1976).

Does this mean this correction makes my coordinate choice wrong without this correction and yours correct? No, as demonstrated by A. Dufour and F. Prunier, J. de Phys. 3, 153 (1942). So by insisting that the effect makes the anisotropy of c it describes as physically meaningful beyond a simple coordinate choice and that it is not a measurable effect means both such claims are wrong.

So when you introduce this curved geometry you are merely relabeling t in (x,y,z,t) into a non-Galilean standard whereupon you are required to change the effective positions of (x,y,z) accordingly such that it is nothing more than an equivalent coordinate relabeling of (x,y,z,t). Yet insist that in some undefined way this coordinate relabeling is physically meaningful. It's only physically meaningful in the same way that a house plan using feet and inches will not work if interpreted to mean meters and centimeters. Attempting to do so has measurable effects. We lost a Mars probe this way.
 
  • #148
my_wan said:
It was a reference to the authoritative (lacking content) rebuttal, so you have deferred the same. I have repeatedly asked for an explanation rather than raw claims.
That is a pretty absurd complaint. I have given you many explanations. The mere fact that you disagree with the explanations given doesn't negate the fact that you have been given explanations.

my_wan said:
Noted: You address the red letters next, but before I respond to that let me quote you on what lead us here.
My statements that you highlighted in red are all correct. This goes back to my comment in post 144. You seem unable to distinguish between coordinate dependent and coordinate independent quantities.

my_wan said:
To this I give an extensive explanation for why coordinate choices have no physical meaning and CANNOT give physical predictions. Only you claimed it does in post #142. Yet you finished the same post by saying differing synchronization convention gives the same brightness v RPM curves for different values of the one way speed of light.

Are here we are a step back, with me saying same physical predictions and you effectively claiming a coordinate choice changes the predicted speed of light.
Coordinate choices change coordinate dependent quantities like the one-way speed of light. Coordinate choices do not change coordinate independent quantities like the outcome of some physical experiment. The outcomes of physical experiments can be used to calculate other values which have some specific meaning, but that calculation, in general, depends on the coordinates used.

The outcome of a physical experiment is the output of some specific measuring device, like the number of ticks of a clock, or, in this case, the voltage on a CCD. That is a coordinate independent quantity. However, the equation which relates the voltage on the CCD to the one way speed of light is coordinate dependent.

As Zhang said, the Edwards simultaneity convention (in which the one way speed of light may range from 1/2 c to infinity), is compatible with relativity. This means that anything which can be predicted (e.g. the voltage on your CCD) using the one-way speed of light = c can also be predicted using the one-way speed of light = 9000 c.

my_wan said:
Now, when I said "Changing the geometry does NOT have any effect on the measured speed of light!", you responded with "Sure it does." Post #142. Yet you say in the same post "...different geometry of the new synchronization convention gives the same brightness v RPM curves for different values of the one way speed of light."
Yes, do you understand now? The brightness v. RPM is the coordinate independent outcome of the physical experiment, the one way speed of light is a value calculated from that physical experiment under a set of assumptions, one of those assumptions being the value of the one way speed of light.

Let this sink in for a bit. If you are still doubtful then I would recommend that we actually work through the problem together, as I suggested in post 142. Calculate the brightness v RPM curve that would indicate a one-way velocity of c and 2c using standard synchronization and then I will show how those same curves can indicate one-way velocities of 10 c and 20 c using a different synchronization convention.
 
  • #149
DaleSpam said:
That is a pretty absurd complaint. I have given you many explanations. The mere fact that you disagree with the explanations given doesn't negate the fact that you have been given explanations.
I don't see them, in spite of my long winded explanations.

DaleSpam said:
My statements that you highlighted in red are all correct. This goes back to my comment in post 144. You seem unable to distinguish between coordinate dependent and coordinate independent quantities.
Yet what your are calling the coordinate dependence of one-way light speeds is a product of using one coordinate choice to describe the system and another coordinate choice to characterize the consequences. You are mixing and matching coordinate choices to to justify the claims.

DaleSpam said:
Coordinate choices change coordinate dependent quantities like the one-way speed of light. Coordinate choices do not change coordinate independent quantities like the outcome of some physical experiment. The outcomes of physical experiments can be used to calculate other values which have some specific meaning, but that calculation, in general, depends on the coordinates used.
Here you have made a valid direct distinction coordinate choices an physical outcomes. Why then when I said:
DaleSpam said:
my_wan said:
And Most Importantly:
Changing the geometry does NOT have any effect on the measured speed of light!
Sure it does.

So when I make a claim about measured outcomes you get to reject it by injecting a coordinate choice. Yet you get to defend that rejection by claiming coordinate choices do not change measured outcomes. Come on now, this is getting absurd beyond reason.


The outcome of a physical experiment is the output of some specific measuring device, like the number of ticks of a clock, or, in this case, the voltage on a CCD. That is a coordinate independent quantity. However, the equation which relates the voltage on the CCD to the one way speed of light is coordinate dependent.

As Zhang said, the Edwards simultaneity convention (in which the one way speed of light may range from 1/2 c to infinity), is compatible with relativity. This means that anything which can be predicted (e.g. the voltage on your CCD) using the one-way speed of light = c can also be predicted using the one-way speed of light = 9000 c.

DaleSpam said:
Yes, do you understand now? The brightness v. RPM is the coordinate independent outcome of the physical experiment, the one way speed of light is a value calculated from that physical experiment under a set of assumptions, one of those assumptions being the value of the one way speed of light.
How is it that I have assumed a one way light speed when in fact the assumption labels it infinite though we know it is certainly not? Therefore the only assumption is that the assumption that was made is going to be empirically wrong. This resolves your next suggestion. If the brightness v. RPM is, as you admit here, a coordinate independent outcome then so is the speed of light. I'll explain in detail in the following response.

DaleSpam said:
Let this sink in for a bit. If you are still doubtful then I would recommend that we actually work through the problem together, as I suggested in post 142. Calculate the brightness v RPM curve that would indicate a one-way velocity of c and 2c using standard synchronization and then I will show how those same curves can indicate one-way velocities of 10 c and 20 c using a different synchronization convention.
So what are are saying is that because you can choose a coordinate choice that is inconsistent with ##L_0## as defined by another coordinate choice it proves the one-way speed c is coordinate dependent, in spite of the fact that it cannot represent any experimental outcome?

Let's look at the brightness v. RPM issue. You have chosen a curved geometry where t is non-uniform, though ##L_0## which defines the diameter of the rotating system is still assumed to be ##L_0 = L_1##. This mixing of coordinate choices is the reason the factor ##c'\theta = \frac{c}{1 + \beta \: cos\theta}##, in which your one-way speed claim depends, occurs.

Thus the fatal flaw in your argument that the one-way speed is coordinate dependent is that you have not shown it was dependent on your coordinate choice, but rather that your coordinate choice differed from a differing coordinate choice. If we restrict the coordinate choice to your curved coordinates alone, then ##L_0 \neq L_1##, since ##L_0 = L_1## is inconsistent with the coordinate choice you made.

Once you adjust ##L_1## to properly represent the diameter that your own coordinate choice dictates then brightness v. RPM once again give a constant c without the ##c'\theta = \frac{c}{1 + \beta \: cos\theta}## correction factor. You cannot use one coordinate choice to describe the system and another to define define the consequences and then claim the difference was the result of your particular coordinate choice.
 
  • #150
my_wan said:
I don't see them, in spite of my long winded explanations.
See posts 58, 77, 96, 105, 119, 125, 131, 138, 142, and 146, all of which contained explanations of one or more of the issues here. Clearly you don't agree with any of the explanations, but they are there.

my_wan said:
Yet what your are calling the coordinate dependence of one-way light speeds is a product of using one coordinate choice to describe the system and another coordinate choice to characterize the consequences. You are mixing and matching coordinate choices to to justify the claims.
This is not true at all. Show exactly where I did that.

my_wan said:
So when I make a claim about measured outcomes you get to reject it by injecting a coordinate choice. Yet you get to defend that rejection by claiming coordinate choices do not change measured outcomes. Come on now, this is getting absurd beyond reason.
I thought that was clear already. What you are claiming in that quote to be a measured outcome is not, in fact, the outcome of a physical experiment, but a coordinate dependent calculation from from the outcome. Different coordinate systems will agree that the brightness v. RPM curve is the same, but they will not agree about what speed of light produced that curve. So the speed of light is a coordinate dependent value, and you merely measure the value you assumed in the calculation.

my_wan said:
How is it that I have assumed a one way light speed when in fact the assumption labels it infinite though we know it is certainly not?
We don't know it is certainly not infinite. We assume it is not.

my_wan said:
If the brightness v. RPM is, as you admit here, a coordinate independent outcome then so is the speed of light. I'll explain in detail in the following response.

So what are are saying is that because you can choose a coordinate choice that is inconsistent with ##L_0## as defined by another coordinate choice it proves the one-way speed c is coordinate dependent, in spite of the fact that it cannot represent any experimental outcome?

Let's look at the brightness v. RPM issue. You have chosen a curved geometry where t is non-uniform, though ##L_0## which defines the diameter of the rotating system is still assumed to be ##L_0 = L_1##. This mixing of coordinate choices is the reason the factor ##c'\theta = \frac{c}{1 + \beta \: cos\theta}##, in which your one-way speed claim depends, occurs.

Thus the fatal flaw in your argument that the one-way speed is coordinate dependent is that you have not shown it was dependent on your coordinate choice, but rather that your coordinate choice differed from a differing coordinate choice. If we restrict the coordinate choice to your curved coordinates alone, then ##L_0 \neq L_1##, since ##L_0 = L_1## is inconsistent with the coordinate choice you made.

Once you adjust ##L_1## to properly represent the diameter that your own coordinate choice dictates then brightness v. RPM once again give a constant c without the ##c'\theta = \frac{c}{1 + \beta \: cos\theta}## correction factor. You cannot use one coordinate choice to describe the system and another to define define the consequences and then claim the difference was the result of your particular coordinate choice.
I have not made any claims about L_0 or L_1 or any \theta to my knowledge. Please define your terms and show mathematically how I have said any of that.

Again, I recommend that you actually go through the exercise of analyzing your device using the standard synchronization convention and show the predicted brightness curve, and I will analyze it using a different synchronization convention, and show how the same brightness curve is compatible with a different velocity of light.

I think that the reason you hesitate to do so is that you realize that the math will back me up.
 
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