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Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology / Re: Can you measure the one way speed of light without synchronised clocks?
« on: Yesterday at 15:10:46 »
That's interesting. The Wiki article references the idea that the method can be considered a "doppler shift".
Well, maybe it can or not- I guess it depends on your definitions.
But there's a streetlight at the end of the road and it's not been replaced by LED yet, so it is a sodium lamp.
And I can put a sodium lamp in a car and drive towards the streetlight.
And, in principle, i can allow light from both curses to fall on a photodiode and I will get a voltage from that diode corresponding to the difference in frequencies - one of my local sodium lamp and the other of the doppler shifted streetlight.
Since I know my speed and the beat frequency and the wavelength of the light, I think that's enough to let me calculare teh speed of light.
Equivalently, I can use a radar "speed gun" and a vehicle with a known speed to measure the speed of light.
Does that count as "one way"?
Well, maybe it can or not- I guess it depends on your definitions.
But there's a streetlight at the end of the road and it's not been replaced by LED yet, so it is a sodium lamp.
And I can put a sodium lamp in a car and drive towards the streetlight.
And, in principle, i can allow light from both curses to fall on a photodiode and I will get a voltage from that diode corresponding to the difference in frequencies - one of my local sodium lamp and the other of the doppler shifted streetlight.
Since I know my speed and the beat frequency and the wavelength of the light, I think that's enough to let me calculare teh speed of light.
Equivalently, I can use a radar "speed gun" and a vehicle with a known speed to measure the speed of light.
Does that count as "one way"?
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