Measuring the Speed of Light (Foucault Method)

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The experiment utilized the Foucault Method to measure the speed of light by reflecting a laser beam off a rotating mirror to a fixed mirror and back, resulting in a calculated speed of (2.9972 ± 0.0139) x 10^8 m/s. Concerns were raised regarding the accuracy of the reported distance measurements and the significant figures used in the data tables, suggesting that they could be misrepresented. Additionally, discrepancies in the statistical error calculations were highlighted, indicating that the claimed error margin was potentially underestimated by an order of magnitude. The reliability of the results was questioned due to the statistical variation not aligning with the reported error, suggesting a need for more rigorous data analysis. Overall, the discussion emphasized the importance of accurate error representation and statistical validation in scientific experiments.
ltetor
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Abstract

In this experiment, a beam of light from a laser was reflected off of a rotating mirror to a fixed mirror, and then reflected back to the rotating mirror. The returning light was focused to a point image in a microscope. Due to the continued rotation of the mirror while the light was in transit from the rotating mirror, to the fixed mirror, and back, the beam was reflected into the microscope at an altered angle, resulting in a displacement of the point image. Measurement of this displacement, along with distance parameters from our setup, known as the Foucault Method, allows for the speed of the light to be calculated. The mean speed of light calculated from this experiment was (2.9972 ± 0.0139) x 108 m/s.

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Hi, I did not check the details but
A = 0.26 m ± 0.0005 m
B = 0.49 m ± 0.0005 m
D = 11.8237 m ± 0.0500 m
looks weird to me. I'd write A=(0.2600 ± 0.0005) m, etc.
In the table
2.838152
± 0.039977
I'd write 2.84 ± 0.04, etc.
Also in table 3 I get suspicious because the lesser is the calculated c value, the lesser the error you get. Using my intuition the opposite should happen.
Maybe I was not taught the right way though and keep in mind that I'm just an undergraduate student.
 
I am not sure what your question is. Looking at the attached document, though, and I conclude that you have underestimated your uncertainties by a rather large factor: perhaps two or three.

Also, Table 3 has a serious problem with significant figures.
 
ltetor said:
The mean speed of light calculated from this experiment was (2.9972 ± 0.0139) x 108 m/s.
If that is your estimate of the error, how do you explains statistical error being (2.9972 ± 0.1071) x 108 m/s?

You should always check the statistical error on your data. It should never be higher than the error you claim. You have made a mistake somewhere by a whole order of magnitude. It doesn't affect your answer, but it affects how believable your answer is. If you claim an error of less than 0.5%, you need to show statistical variation of less than 0.5%. It's not. The fact that you didn't get 3.1 for an answer is entirely down to luck. Unless it's not even that. Did you keep all of the data points you took, or only the ten you liked?


Just to illustrate this a little better I've attached a plot of your data. Red dots are the data from the table. Pale blue band is the probability distribution according to 2.9972 ± 0.0139 you claim, with solid blue dashes marking off the area of the band that should contain 90% of your data points according to that error. Doesn't look good, for your claim, does it?
 

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I would like to use a pentaprism with some amount of magnification. The pentaprism will be used to reflect a real image at 90 degrees angle but I also want the reflected image to appear larger. The distance between the prism and the real image is about 70cm. The pentaprism has two reflecting sides (surfaces) with mirrored coating and two refracting sides. I understand that one of the four sides needs to be curved (spherical curvature) to achieve the magnification effect. But which of the...
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