Can Light Behave Differently in Moving Inertial Reference Frames?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion explores the behavior of light in different inertial reference frames, particularly in relation to the implications of special relativity and the results of the Michelson-Morley experiment. Participants consider various thought experiments involving light propagation and the effects of relative motion on the perception of light's speed and simultaneity.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that light can travel through a medium and without one, proposing a thought experiment involving multiple detectors to measure potential offsets in light arrival times due to motion.
  • Another participant counters that special relativity (SR) predicts the speed of light remains constant between stationary observers, implying no delay would be observed in the proposed experiment.
  • There is a discussion about the implications of moving towards another observer and whether light would exceed the speed of light when emitted from a moving source, which is challenged by other participants.
  • A participant presents a scenario with two sticks and light bulbs to illustrate potential discrepancies in light arrival times due to relative motion, questioning how SR accounts for this situation.
  • Further clarification is sought on whether light from both bulbs would reach their respective targets simultaneously, with some participants suggesting that the relativity of simultaneity could explain the perceived differences in timing.
  • One participant speculates that even if the bulbs are level at the start, the motion of one stick could lead to light from one bulb reaching the other stick's bulb before the other light does, raising questions about the consistency of light speed across different scenarios.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the implications of special relativity regarding the speed of light and simultaneity. There is no consensus on whether the proposed thought experiments would yield the expected results, and multiple competing interpretations of light behavior in moving frames are present.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference the Michelson-Morley experiment and Einstein's principles of special relativity, but there are unresolved assumptions regarding the setup of the thought experiments and the interpretation of results. The discussion includes various hypothetical scenarios that may not align with established experimental outcomes.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those exploring concepts in special relativity, the nature of light, and the implications of inertial reference frames in physics.

ABHoT
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Be gentle, I have physics textbooks on order ;) which should satisfy my cravings, until then..


I would like to try and stick a pole-in-the-ground so to speak so I can say 'all movement is an offset from here'.

I've read up a little on the Michelson-Morley experiment.

I believe light can travel both through a medium (when on Earth) and without a medium (when in space).

I think I mean using the speed of light outside a medium. I am currently believing that nothing in the universe that emits light is in exactly the same place after it's started emmitting. Wherever the centre of the expanding sphere of light is, is the pole-in-the-ground, and is not where the source is anymore.

If you take 6 light detectors and arrange them somewhere in space in a sphere, or 12 (is there a name for the number series that describes increasing the points on a sphere symmetrically?). In the centre of this sphere is a light source and you switch it on, measure when the front surface of the light wall hits each detector, then switch it off and measure when the back surface of the light wall hits the detectors.

If light, either because of its speed or something else about it, behaves independently of anything elses movement once it's been emitted, would this be be picked up as a delay in the readings hitting some of the sensors?

I am wondering what would be the minimum speed of our solar system/galaxy/planet/group-of-detectors for an offset to be detected, or what would be the widest sphere for the detectors to be configured into register an offset, or both (assuming there actually ever would be an offset registered).

The following are the results I'm imagining:

a) The front surface of the light hits all detectors simultaneously. Shortly after so does the back surface.
b) The front surface of the light hits all detectors simultaneously. Shortly after the back surface hits the detectors (or stops hitting the detectors, rather) in an offset sort of way.
c) Both the front and back surface spheres of the light wall register delays of the same 'shape' and timing.
d) Both the front and back surface spheres of the light wall register a delay of the same shape, the back surface registering an even larger offset but in the same direction.
e) The front surface hits the detectors in an offset way and the back surface stops hitting the detectors but is offset in a different direction(!)

I am not sure if this is an imaginary repeat of the Micheson-Morley experiment, which answer I should expect or what they ought to mean.
 
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ABHoT said:
If light, either because of its speed or something else about it, behaves independently of anything elses movement once it's been emitted, would this be be picked up as a delay in the readings hitting some of the sensors?
That's not what SR predicts nor what the MMx shows. They predict/show that the speed of light between any two observers that are stationary wrt each other is always constant. Therefore, there will never be any delay.

Think about it this way: the MMx apparatus could be mounted inside your sphere and provide the results for your experiment.
 
Thx.
russ_watters said:
...the speed of light between any two observers that are stationary wrt each other is always constant.
Forgive me if this is obvious: This sounds like it implies then that if observer or object A is moving towards observer (or object) B at speed x and object A turns it light on, the light will exceed the constant c and travel towards object B at speed x + c(?)
 
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ABHoT said:
Thx.Forgive me if this is obvious: This sounds like it implies then that if observer or object A is moving towards observer (or object) B at speed x and object A turns it light on, the light will exceed the constant c and travel towards object B at speed x + c(?)

That is not the implication, and a brief perusal of Einstein's 1915 paper(s) will explain that nicely.
 
ABHoT said:
Thx.Forgive me if this is obvious: This sounds like it implies then that if observer or object A is moving towards observer (or object) B at speed x and object A turns it light on, the light will exceed the constant c and travel towards object B at speed x + c(?)
Though you haven't explicitly said so, you're introducing an external frame of reference from which to measure the speed of light. That's not how you measure speed. The speed is measured by taking the distance between A and B and dividing by the time for the the light to traverse it. That's it. You're taking that speed and adding the speed that the whole device is moving relative to an external reference frame. That's not what speed is.

That the speed isn't measured against an external frame of reference is the point of the first posulate of SR and what the MMx shows. The first postulate says that the laws of the universe are the same for any inertial reference frame. That means s=d/t regardless of what inertial frame of reference you are in.
 
russ_watters said:
...the speed of light between any two observers that are stationary wrt each other is always constant.
I am thinking a clittle clearer now.

I have two sticks in space with light bulbs on the ends, say bulbs A & B on one stick, bulbs C & D on the other. Both sticks are straight and are the same length.

I hold both sticks upright, next to each other lining up bulbs A & C at the top and bulbs B, D at the bottom. I switch on bulbs A & C together and simultaneously drop the first stick so it is falling (or it was already moving and just flying past the other stick but the bulbs were level when the lights were switched on).

Light from A should reach B at the same time that light from C reaches D because both the top bulbs are stationary wrt to their bottom bulbs, both are level when it started and both sticks are the same length.

But stick one is falling and these are really long sticks, so by the time light reaches bulb B from A the sticks should no longer be level. To my thinking, at some point light from bulb A on stick one ought to pass bulb D on stick two before light from C has.

But how can this be if everything was equal and level at the start? Does SR make this possible?
 
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ABHoT said:
I am thinking a clittle clearer now.

I have two sticks in space with light bulbs on the ends, say bulbs A & B on one stick, bulbs C & D on the other. Both sticks are straight and are the same length.

I hold both sticks upright, next to each other lining up bulbs A & C at the top and bulbs B, D at the bottom. I switch on bulbs A & C together and simultaneously drop the first stick so it is falling (or it was already moving and just flying past the other stick but the bulbs were level when the lights were switched on).

Light from A should reach B at the same time that light from C reaches D because both the top bulbs are stationary wrt to their bottom bulbs, both are level when it started and both sticks are the same length.

But stick one is falling and these are really long sticks, so by the time light reaches bulb B from A the sticks should no longer be level. To my thinking, at some point light from bulb A on stick one ought to pass bulb D on stick two before light from C has.

But how can this be if everything was equal and level at the start? Does SR make this possible?

It is the Relativity of Simultaneity. http://www.pitt.edu/~jdnorton/Goodies/rel_of_sim/index.html
 
so light from bulbs A and C WILL both reach D at the same time, and will both reach bulb B at the same time but slightly later? and if I measured the distance between A (or C) when the light started to separately B and D when the light reaches each resp., d/t will show the same speed for light for A --> B, A --> D, C --> B, C --> D.
 
I suppore as both sticks can't occupy exactly the same space there would always be a slight diagonal for A --> D and C --> B meaning still the same speed for light throughout(?) but slightly longer times & distances than A --> B and C --> D.
 
  • #10
ABHoT said:
I am thinking a clittle clearer now.

I have two sticks in space with light bulbs on the ends, say bulbs A & B on one stick, bulbs C & D on the other. Both sticks are straight and are the same length.

I hold both sticks upright, next to each other lining up bulbs A & C at the top and bulbs B, D at the bottom. I switch on bulbs A & C together and simultaneously drop the first stick so it is falling (or it was already moving and just flying past the other stick but the bulbs were level when the lights were switched on).

Light from A should reach B at the same time that light from C reaches D because both the top bulbs are stationary wrt to their bottom bulbs, both are level when it started and both sticks are the same length.

But stick one is falling and these are really long sticks, so by the time light reaches bulb B from A the sticks should no longer be level. To my thinking, at some point light from bulb A on stick one ought to pass bulb D on stick two before light from C has.

But how can this be if everything was equal and level at the start? Does SR make this possible?
That one sentence of mine had a slightly imprecise wording: the requirement is for an inertial (non-accelerating) frame of reference, not merely a stationary one. When you drop the stick, you are adding an acceleration, essentially changing the experimental setup in the middle of the experiment. This can be dealt with, but it isn't the simple test case of SR. SR is for inertial reference frames.
 

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