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  4. Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
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Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?

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Offline PmbPhy

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #20 on: 26/05/2016 13:59:08 »
Quote from: arcmetal
I see now that it is a great way of evading the issue, ...
Let's try to ease up, shall we? I.e. it's in appropriate to accuse someone of evading an issue, especially members such as Colin. Such accusations, which in this case is pure speculation, is unfriendly and as such it violates the forums acceptable usage policy. I.e. see: http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=8535.0
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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #21 on: 26/05/2016 19:50:38 »
Quote from: arcmetal on 25/05/2016 22:26:24
Quote from: Colin2B on 25/05/2016 09:02:09

Quote from: arcmetal on 24/05/2016 23:57:49
We get (340-16.6) 323.4m/s if the car and wavefront are moving in the same direction.
Correct. The wavefront will catch up with the car, but more slowly. This can also be termed closing, but is not the scenario given in McQueen's incorrect calculation.


Now you are in a position to complete the correct calculation of time to intercept and distance traveled by car (b).

I see now that it is a great way of evading the issue, that is, the issue of a wavefront's speed depending only on the medium and not on its initiator.

This has been explained. You may disagree so then agree to disagree. By accusing someone of being evasive you appear to be trying to foster the impression of dishonesty on the part of another member. I hope you will apologise for this slight. If not shame on you.
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Offline arcmetal

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #22 on: 27/05/2016 23:03:58 »
Quote from: Colin2B on 26/05/2016 08:35:55
Quote from: arcmetal on 25/05/2016 22:26:24
I see now that it is a great way of evading the issue, that is, the issue of a wavefront's speed depending only on the medium and not on its initiator.
I think you need to go back and reread everything I've written - including Alan's posts.
Nothing has been evaded, we've been very clear and upfront. That's the reason I took the trouble to write a longer explanation than usual, rather than give you a glib answer.
There is no universal rule that a wavefront's speed depends only on the medium and not on the initiator, however, as we explained it does occur with some media in some situations.

Its just that I have not seen it written anywhere, nor can I imagine how physcially, where it is suggested  that the speed of a wave is not dependent on its medium's properties.  This is why I found it be rather illuminating.


Quote from: jeffreyH on 26/05/2016 19:50:38
Quote from: arcmetal on 25/05/2016 22:26:24
Quote from: Colin2B on 25/05/2016 09:02:09

Quote from: arcmetal on 24/05/2016 23:57:49
We get (340-16.6) 323.4m/s if the car and wavefront are moving in the same direction.
Correct. The wavefront will catch up with the car, but more slowly. This can also be termed closing, but is not the scenario given in McQueen's incorrect calculation.


Now you are in a position to complete the correct calculation of time to intercept and distance traveled by car (b).

I see now that it is a great way of evading the issue, that is, the issue of a wavefront's speed depending only on the medium and not on its initiator.

This has been explained. You may disagree so then agree to disagree. By accusing someone of being evasive you appear to be trying to foster the impression of dishonesty on the part of another member. I hope you will apologise for this slight. If not shame on you.

It seems this media, the forum, is too simple a method to convey every nuanced meaning.  After all, this is just basic texting back and forth, so not all can be explained at the same time.

If I was to put it another way, is that its directed at the way that physics is taught in general these days, and not at Colin2B.  So, my statement would still hold: that the way it is explained, or taught, or whatever, is one way to evade the core issue.

The core issue being: that the speed of sound is solely dependent on the properties of the medium, and not on the speed of the originator.

If that isn't clear enough, I am not sure how else to explain it.
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Offline Flatland

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #23 on: 28/05/2016 00:06:00 »
No.  The speed of sound changes depending on the density of the air.  The speed of light in a vacuum never changes.
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Offline Colin2B (OP)

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #24 on: 29/05/2016 17:32:59 »
Quote from: Flatland on 28/05/2016 00:06:00
No.  The speed of sound changes depending on the density of the air.  The speed of light in a vacuum never changes.
That's true.
Interesting to note that when light passes through a medium such as water it's speed also changes with density - mainly due to temperature.
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Offline JohnDuffield

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #25 on: 30/05/2016 15:01:03 »
The speed of light varies too. The speed of light is constant is something of a popscience myth I'm afraid.   Here's a screenshot from the Einstein digital papers, and another from Irwin Shapiro's Shapiro delay paper:





Also see this Baez article:

"Einstein talked about the speed of light changing in his new theory.  In the English translation of his 1920 book "Relativity: the special and general theory" he wrote: "according to the general theory of relativity, the law of the constancy of the velocity [Einstein clearly means speed here, since velocity (a vector) is not in keeping with the rest of his sentence] of light in vacuo, which constitutes one of the two fundamental assumptions in the special theory of relativity [...] cannot claim any unlimited validity.  A curvature of rays of light can only take place when the velocity [speed]  of propagation of light varies with position."  This difference in speeds is precisely that referred to above by ceiling and floor observers."

We measure the local speed of light to be constant because we use the local motion of light to define our second and our metre, which we then use to measure the local speed of light. Hence it's a tautology. Magueijo and Moffat talked about it in http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.4507.
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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #26 on: 30/05/2016 19:15:21 »
Just about everything you say John is a myth. You may ocassionally and accidentally get somethinfg right by copying and pasting the right source material. You are helping no one learn physics the right way. People should be aware of that. Don't try pushing your own agenda.
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Offline JohnDuffield

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #27 on: 31/05/2016 14:25:04 »
No, what I say isn't a myth, because Einstein and others said it, and because what they said is supported by the hard scientific evidence of for example the Shapiro delay. I'm afraid what you believe is the myth, promoted by popscience magazines and TV programs and other sources. It's these sources that aren't helping people to learn physics the right way.
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Offline Colin2B (OP)

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #28 on: 31/05/2016 23:42:22 »
Although we would all agree that the speed of light is not constant in all situations, this topic is more concerned with attempts to misrepresent the propagation of waves in a medium and draw incorrect conclusions regarding the behaviour of light.
Whether due to a shallow understanding of the behaviour of waves or a deliberate attempt to shoehorn physics into a false conclusion, the following is typical of the misunderstanding:

Quote from: McQueen on 29/05/2016 23:21:02
But The wave's speed depends only on the medium. Adding energy to the wave doesn't speed it up, it just increases its amplitude. A water wave, unlike many other types of wave, has a speed that also depends on its shape: a broader wave moves faster.  This means that just like electromagnetic radiation the speed of sound and of waves in water are invariant, they do not follow the laws of  Galilean transformations.
If energy is added to a water wave, either by an increase in wind speed or by increasing the speed of a boat creating waves, then the wave will increase in speed and consequently wavelength.

Similar misunderstandings regarding the speed of sound in air has been dealt with above, along with the myth that the speed of waves in a medium is independent of the motion of the observer through the medium or of motion of the medium relative to the observer.

All of this misdirection is intended to 'prove' that light travels in a medium. Personally I don't care if it does or not, so long as the physics is not not misrepresented.
« Last Edit: 01/06/2016 00:19:55 by Colin2B »
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Offline jeffreyH

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #29 on: 01/06/2016 08:27:29 »
Quote from: JohnDuffield on 31/05/2016 14:25:04
No, what I say isn't a myth, because Einstein and others said it, and because what they said is supported by the hard scientific evidence of for example the Shapiro delay. I'm afraid what you believe is the myth, promoted by popscience magazines and TV programs and other sources. It's these sources that aren't helping people to learn physics the right way.

Where in any of that did the word vacuum appear? The coordinate speed of light is something you are using incorrectly without mentioning any frame of reference for the benefit of the reader. That is deceitful. You are only giving the information that you hope will sway readers in your direction of thought. Don't go quoting sources at me. Prove it yourself. I'm all ears.
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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #30 on: 01/06/2016 14:05:53 »
Quote from: Colin2B on 31/05/2016 23:42:22
Although we would all agree that the speed of light is not constant in all situations, this topic is more concerned with attempts to misrepresent the propagation of waves in a medium and draw incorrect conclusions regarding the behaviour of light.
The behaviour of light is an interesting topic. 

Quote from: Colin2B on 31/05/2016 23:42:22
Whether due to a shallow understanding of the behaviour of waves or a deliberate attempt to shoehorn physics into a false conclusion, the following is typical of the misunderstanding:
Quote from: McQueen on 29/05/2016 23:21:02
But The wave's speed depends only on the medium. Adding energy to the wave doesn't speed it up, it just increases its amplitude. A water wave, unlike many other types of wave, has a speed that also depends on its shape: a broader wave moves faster.  This means that just like electromagnetic radiation the speed of sound and of waves in water are invariant, they do not follow the laws of  Galilean transformations.
There's some contradiction there. And surely everybody can look this sort of thing up, on for example Rod Nave's hyperphysics?

Quote from: Colin2B on 31/05/2016 23:42:22
Similar misunderstandings regarding the speed of sound in air has been dealt with above, along with the myth that the speed of waves in a medium is independent of the motion of the observer...
That's true for light too. See the Baez article: "That the speed of light depends on position when measured by a non-inertial observer is a fact routinely used by laser gyroscopes that form the core of some inertial navigation systems.  These gyroscopes send light around a closed loop, and if the loop rotates, an observer riding on the loop will measure light to travel more slowly when it traverses the loop in one direction than when it traverses the loop in the opposite direction. This is known as the Sagnac Effect..."

Quote from: Colin2B on 31/05/2016 23:42:22
All of this misdirection is intended to 'prove' that light travels in a medium. Personally I don't care if it does or not, so long as the physics is not misrepresented.
I share your sentiment. But perhaps the moot point here is the significant difference between light waves and water waves: the quantum nature of light. As for what that really is, see Leonard Susskind in this video. At 2 minutes 50 seconds he rolls his whiteboard marker round saying angular momentum is quantized. Roll that marker round fast or slow, but roll it round the same circumference, because Planck's constant of action h is common to all photons regardless of wavelength. You'll know all about sine waves and circles, but I rather fancy one has to play the guitar to see what's hidden in plain view:

  Image courtesy of NASA

Imagine your left hand working the frets changing the wavelength, whilst your right hands plucks a constant pluck with your plectrum. A constant pluck. Look at the picture above again. The depicted amplitude is always the same regardless of wavelength. 
« Last Edit: 01/06/2016 14:11:36 by JohnDuffield »
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Offline Colin2B (OP)

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #31 on: 01/06/2016 16:33:25 »
Quote from: JohnDuffield on 01/06/2016 14:05:53
surely everybody can look this sort of thing up, on for example Rod Nave's hyperphysics?
Oh how I wish everyone as as diligent as you before posting a new theory. I have a feeling many invent a theory and then twist what little they know to fit!
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Offline JohnDuffield

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #32 on: 02/06/2016 23:09:31 »
Quote from: Colin2B on 01/06/2016 16:33:25
Oh how I wish everyone as as diligent as you before posting a new theory. I have a feeling many invent a theory and then twist what little they know to fit!
My pleasure Colin. For myself, I wish somebody would do something about the unpleasantness from certain forum members.
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Offline jeffreyH

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #33 on: 02/06/2016 23:25:00 »
So asking you to answer a physics question needs moderation. Last time I checked it was still a physics forum. You portray youself as some sort of authority. This means that people may think that you are a source of legitimate answers. People not conversant with physics have no way of telling if the information they receive is reliable or not. You are basically stating that a lot of mainstream physics is pop science mythology. I think that deserves to be challenged lest the uninitiated be led astray. If you would just answer the question you could prove me wrong immediately. Anyone familiar with the metric would do so immediately. If you want people to believe in you then show them. The longer you put it off the worse it looks.
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Offline JohnDuffield

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #34 on: 03/06/2016 13:25:24 »
Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
So asking you to answer a physics question needs moderation. Last time I checked it was still a physics forum. You portray youself as some sort of authority.
I'm not the authority. Einstein and others are the authority. And again, here's a screenshot from the Einstein digital papers, and another from Irwin Shapiro's Shapiro delay paper:





Note "the speed of light is spatially variable" and "the speed of a light wave depends on the strength of the gravitational potential". Also see Is The Speed of Light Everywhere the Same? and http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.4507 where Magueijo and Moffat referred to the tautology: we define our second and our metre using the local motion of light, and then use them to measure the local motion of light.

Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
This means that people may think that you are a source of legitimate answers. People not conversant with physics have no way of telling if the information they receive is reliable or not.
Yes they do. They can follow the references above and read up on what Einstein and others said.

Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
You are basically stating that a lot of mainstream physics is pop science mythology. I think that deserves to be challenged lest the uninitiated be led astray.
No, I'm saying you're claiming to be talking mainstream physics when in truth you're peddling cargo-cult trash. 

Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
If you would just answer the question you could prove me wrong immediately. Anyone familiar with the metric would do so immediately. If you want people to believe in you then show them. The longer you put it off the worse it looks.
What question? Something obscure, like why is k is not treated as complex in the FLRW metric? Where I'll give the right answer and you'll claim it's wrong? No thanks. I'll stay on topic instead, and talk physics in my usual civil fashion. If you prefer to play the troll and chase posters away with your sneering dishonest abuse, that's your choice.
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Offline jeffreyH

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #35 on: 03/06/2016 14:49:14 »
Well deflected John now you have given yourself the excuse not to answer. Well done. A stroke of genius.
Quote from: JohnDuffield on 03/06/2016 13:25:24
Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
So asking you to answer a physics question needs moderation. Last time I checked it was still a physics forum. You portray youself as some sort of authority.
I'm not the authority. Einstein and others are the authority. And again, here's a screenshot from the Einstein digital papers, and another from Irwin Shapiro's Shapiro delay paper:





Note "the speed of light is spatially variable" and "the speed of a light wave depends on the strength of the gravitational potential". Also see Is The Speed of Light Everywhere the Same? and http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.4507 where Magueijo and Moffat referred to the tautology: we define our second and our metre using the local motion of light, and then use them to measure the local motion of light.

Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
This means that people may think that you are a source of legitimate answers. People not conversant with physics have no way of telling if the information they receive is reliable or not.
Yes they do. They can follow the references above and read up on what Einstein and others said.

Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
You are basically stating that a lot of mainstream physics is pop science mythology. I think that deserves to be challenged lest the uninitiated be led astray.
No, I'm saying you're claiming to be talking mainstream physics when in truth you're peddling cargo-cult trash. 

Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
If you would just answer the question you could prove me wrong immediately. Anyone familiar with the metric would do so immediately. If you want people to believe in you then show them. The longer you put it off the worse it looks.
What question? Something obscure, like why is k is not treated as complex in the FLRW metric? Where I'll give the right answer and you'll claim it's wrong? No thanks. I'll stay on topic instead, and talk physics in my usual civil fashion. If you prefer to play the troll and chase posters away with your sneering dishonest abuse, that's your choice.
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Offline Colin2B (OP)

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Re: Is speed of light in a vacuum behaving in same way as speed of sound in air?
« Reply #36 on: 05/06/2016 06:48:35 »
Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2016 23:25:00
People not conversant with physics have no way of telling if the information they receive is reliable or not.

John
This point is worth noting because this site is primarily educational and we get people of all levels reading these pages, so we try to cater for their needs. When I'm in a hurry I  find it difficult to write concise replies which cover sufficient background for the general reader. This combined with our use of shortcut-phrases (eg speed of light is constant) instead of the more accurate long form (speed of light in a vacuum is constant for a local observer in an inertial frame) can lead to confusion for the general reader.
If I might quote one example where you could be misunderstood:
Quote from: JohnDuffield on 30/05/2016 15:01:03
We measure the local speed of light to be constant because we use the local motion of light to define our second and our metre, which we then use to measure the local speed of light. Hence it's a tautology. Magueijo and Moffat talked about it in http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.4507.
Some readers might misread this as implying that the speed of light is now constant for the local, inertial observer because and only because of the use of a specific standard for measurement and calibration, rather than because of a physical property of light.
Magueijo and Moffat discuss the tautology created by the use of light as an SI standard, but obviously the standard is created from the constancy not the other way round, and they go on to discuss how standards might be defined if light speed is found to vary. As they say: "The physical meaning of a constant c has to lie elsewhere, beyond the convenient but not necessary definitions of units.".  As Don Koks says  in the article you quoted the Baez article
"it's nonsense to say that the speed of light is now constant just because the SI definitions of units define its numerical value to be constant."

Although this misreading of your post is not an error that would be made by someone well versed in physics, I think you can see that such misunderstandings can arise very easily for the more general reader.
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