DaleSpam said:
For the MMX spacetime is not very curved, the rotation is slow, and it is not very sensitive to either curvature or rotation.
With my current calculations, this is the only answer I believe is correct: that this difference can be ignored for small speeds. I still hope I did a mistake somewhere.
DaleSpam said:
The area (0) is the reason why MMX is insensitive to rotation. It does not matter if MMX were rotated or not because it is insensitive to rotation. One of the hallmarks of a good measuring device is that it is designed to be insensitive to extraneous factors whenever possible.
But now you are talking about
area as everyone else, and I have the feeling you still don't understood what I am asking.
I am not talking about rotating the MMX device. I am talking about Earth rotating while the experiment is performed.
Consider how the MMX experiment is performed. Device is placed at Earth surface. Earth is rotating, so it is not an inertial frame.
If you consider the distance between splitter and
forward mirror, it is moving in the direction of Earth's rotation, and it is not in an inertial frame.
If distance between beam splitter and
upper mirror is D, then from the moment the blue beam leaves the splitter, t=D/c time will pass until it hits the upper mirror. Additional t=D/c time will pass until it gets back to beam splitter, making its total travel time 2D/c.
On the other hand, if distance between beam splitter and
forward mirror is also equal to D, from the moment the red beam leaves the beam splitter, t=D/(c+Rw) time will pass before it hits the forward mirror, because it's "moving away" from the beam splitter. (applying same logic from the
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagnac_effect#Theory" article for an observer looking at Earth). On its way back, it will take shorter time, t=D/(c-Rw).
The problem is that D/(c-Rw) + D/(c+Rw) does not equal 2D/c.
So, obviously for w<<c it can be approximated to 2D/c, but it is not equal, so it appears like (if speed light is constant) there should exist very small interference (due to small w).
Similar to the logic in Sagnac effect article, SR doesn't even need to be applied if you pretend you are observing Earth from a "stationary" spaceship. In that case everything is moving, light speed is constant and you don't need to worry. Or is Wikipedia Sagnac effect calculation wrong?
I also suspect that Sagnac effect calculations don't apply completely, since path is linear between beam splitter and forward mirror, so I think that the actual distance which light passes in both cases is r=2R*sin[D/(2R)], if D is the curved length along the surface, but that complicates the calculation a bit and I still don't get a null result.
starthaus said:
I can prove to you in about half a page that MMX, though executed in the rotating frame of the Earth, produces, as predicted by SR, a null result. Before I do so, I will ask you to learn SR, otherwise my post would be a waste of time.
I believe I know SR good enough already, I am familiar with LT and so far haven't found any problem with the experiments. I certainly don't know GR, but if you can explain this using SR, that would be great.