cragar said:
yes i am talking about a stationary observer , maybe this picture will help.
I love the picture - the original 'back of a fag packet in a pub' ! But it gives the idea, which is what counts.
I think this boils down to understanding what happens when you are traveling in a straight line and send out a light beam 'perpendicular' (from your point of view) to your path . Does another observer, at a different speed or 'stationary' see the beam going at right angles to your path or not? Once this has been sorted out, it may be possible to apply the result to the bicycle wheel experiment.
Assume you are flying through a thin ('stationary') mist (to make the beam visible). Ignore SR, initially.**
Imagine the beam is sent out horizontally and you are 'looking down' on it, sitting in your ship. The light returning from the beam (reflected by 'stationary' particles) will arrive later than it was sent and you will have moved forwards. Hence, it will appear to be coming from slightly behind the position it started from on the ship. The beam will appear as a line, tilted backwards from the perpendicular - if you are pointing the laser axis perpendicular to the ship's motion. The angle will be v/c, at low speeds, I think. By pointing the source forwards by this angle, to compensate, the beam will now appear to you as being perpendicular to the direction of motion.
For an observer, 'stationary' wrt the mist and vertically above, information takes the same amount of time to reach him from all parts of the ship and beam.
The observer will see the ship moving forwards and light scattered from mist particles will have taken time to get to them before they travel to the observer. Hence the beam will appear to lag behind also. But the difference in time lag will be half that of the light returning to the ship so I reckon the apparent angle will be halved.
SO, if the beam is pointed by the shipboard observer so as to appear to be perpendicular on the ship, the beam will appear to be pointing forwards for a remote observer.
Ignoring the extra problem introduced by the relativistic effects due to the acceleration associated with circular motion, this would transfer into the bicycle wheel question and it would imply that the beam would, indeed, appear to spread out as it would have a tangential component to its direction as far as the remote observer was concerned. I think I have also implied that this would also be true for the shipboard observer. Any ideas?
**Einstein proposed a not-too-dissimilar thought experiment involving cows, an electric fence and two observers. This did not involve SR but showed how our observation of an event is affected by our reference frame and the speed of light. It's described here:
https://www.physicsforums.com/archive/index.php/t-79325.html