All descriptions I read are from light being absorbed, not just passing by if it was merely being transmitted through a material that passes light like glass. — noAxioms
What does any of this have to do with relativity thought experiments that F-E is asking about? — noAxioms
The inadequacy of which demonstrates that there is no underlying reality for this conceptual structure. — Metaphysician Undercover
Essentially you need to tell me the spatial separation between events E1 and E2, and given that we know light speed, we can compute (not measure) the time it takes for light to make the trip in the frame you've specified. This is obviously not a measurement of light speed since we're assuming a constant for it in our calculation. — noAxioms
Essentially you need to tell me the spatial separation between events E1 and E2, and given that we know light speed, we can compute (not measure) the time it takes for light to make the trip in the frame you've specified — noAxioms
Didn't know this. Looked it up, and pretty much yes. They said that light was absorbed by the lattice, not the atoms, as evidenced by the absence of absorption lines in the refracted spectrum.It concerns the speed at which light is transmitted. It's known that the speed of light is different in different mediums, and this involves refraction. I believe the classical way of understanding this, understanding light as waves, involves the wavelength of the light. The quantum understanding of this difference in speed involves the light photons being absorbed and reemitted by the atoms of the material. — Metaphysician Undercover
This can be done, but the synchronization of the two clocks is frame dependent. For that matter, so is the distance measurement since E1 and E2 are not simultaneous.If we have the spatial separation between events E1 and E2, and know the times at E1 and E2, we can calculate the light speed. (not measure?). Why assume it a constant when we are trying to measure it in the first place? — FreeEmotion
Slowly moving apart doesn't necessarily work. You start at a midpoint and move the two clocks symmetrically in opposite directions. That defines a frame, but the two clocks stay synchronized despite the speed at which this might be done. Now you can measure your light speed. Painful way to do it, but valid.Now I know that the clocks need to be synchronized, or the other option is slowly moved apart.
If we are able to have control over how fast the clocks are moved apart, we can establish the error bounds due to non-synchronization and take this into account.
If you use synchronized clocks, it is a measurement. If I know light speed, I can compute the time and don't need the clocks. But synchronization is frame dependent.Why "compute" and not "measure"? — FreeEmotion
What is the underlying method of light transmission that relativity ultimately describes? — FreeEmotion
They said that light was absorbed by the lattice, not the atoms, as evidenced by the absence of absorption lines in the refracted spectrum. — noAxioms
We got about one digit of accuracy with that setup. — noAxioms
If you use synchronized clocks, it is a measurement. If I know light speed, I can compute the time and don't need the clocks. But synchronization is frame dependent. — noAxioms
Given an arbitrary choice of frame, yes, this measurement can be done.So in the above example, it is possible to synchronize clocks, and it is possible to measure the one way speed of light? — FreeEmotion
What do you mean by 'proves reality' and which scientific finding lays this claim?When we hear that a certain experiment 'proves relativity' we get the impression that scientists are one step closer to establishing relativity as absolute reality. — FreeEmotion
What do you mean by 'proves reality' and which scientific finding lays this claim? — noAxioms
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