OWSOL said:
Sorry, don't know yet how to insert quotes
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OWSOL said:
the experiment doesn't need any clock synchronization
Then either it isn't measuring the one way speed of light or you are fooling yourself. Looking at your design, it's the latter.
OWSOL said:
change the way both clocks are stopped from a light source to a solid shaft (as solid as needed) that has two blades, identical and perfectly aligned to each other. Those blades are in turn aligned with each clock's photo sensor.
The shaft is just another way of synchronising the clocks. It doesn't work either. How "rigid" systems behave depends on your choice of isotropic or anisotropic speed of light, and believing that the shaft can (at least under some circumstances) act like a Newtonian rigid shaft is equivalent to assuming isotropy. Remember that it's held together by electromagnetic forces, and your description of their behaviour is intimately tied to your description of the behaviour of electromagnetic waves. It turns out that a rotating shaft that you would describe as rigid if you assume isotropy you would describe as twisted if you assume anisotropy. So your clocks start simultaneously if you assume isotropy and not if you assume anisotropy.
As I said before, this is not something you can sneak around by clever experimental design. The fundamental reason is that there is no separate space and time, only 4d spacetime. When you think of space and time separately, you are thinking of picking a timelike direction and calling it "time", and slicing spacetime into a stack of 3d "sheets" and calling each one "space at an instant". If you pick a time direction orthogonal to the "sheets" then you have an isotropic speed of light. If you pick a time direction that is not orthogonal to the "sheets" you have an anisotropic speed of light. That is why you can never design an experiment to detect anisotropy of the one way speed of light - whether it is isotropic or not is
your choiceof how to think about spacetime and no physics depends on your choice. Changing your choice does not change your experiment, it just changes how you describe it - and it changes how you describe your kit in exactly the same way as it changes how you describe light speed.
There is no way around this. There is an infinitely deep rabbit hole of ever more complex ways to try, just like perpetual motion and squaring the circle and other such known impossibilities. I would advise you not to climb further down it because I've just explained why you will never succeed. If you didn't understand the explanation please ask, but please don't present more schemes to do the impossible - it's a waste of everybody's time.