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  1. Naked Science Forum
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  4. Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
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Does light actually travel at the speed of light?

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Offline JennyGracie (OP)

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Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« on: 26/02/2019 15:56:08 »
Raph wants to know...

Does light ever get up to the speed of light? As it appears to be either reflected, or deflected by hot or cold gasses, or even gravity, on it's way through the universe. Or is the measurement a mere average, theoretical mathematical calculation ?

Can anyone help us out?
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Offline chiralSPO

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #1 on: 26/02/2019 16:37:04 »
c represents the upper bound on how fast light can travel. Any perturbations decrease how quickly light travels through space. (so it can't be an average, because no values are higher)
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Offline Halc

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #2 on: 26/02/2019 17:52:38 »
Light travels locally at c in a perfect vacuum.  There is no perfect vacuum anywhere, so one can only approximate this condition.
That said, it is a local restriction.  I shine a beam at a reflector on the moon and it will probably go there and back faster than c as measured by my watch, because the gravity well is lower for most of the trip and hence time is less dilated between here and the moon.  At no point does it move faster than c as measured by any observer as it passes by.
Similarly, light leaving the galaxy and heading nowhere in particular will move away from us at faster than c not only because we're away from the gravity of the galaxy, but it gets the expansion of space added to it.  So first light from the birth of our galaxy is currently increasing its distance at a pace greater that twice c if you look at it that way.

The most distant visible object is some quasar that is currently 22 billion light years away (proper distance), well outside of the Hubble Sphere, so it is (and always has been) increasing is (proper) distance from us at a pace greater than c, and yet we see it.  Light that it 'currently' emits in the opposite direction retreats from us faster than does the thing that the quasar has since become.
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Offline PmbPhy

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #3 on: 26/02/2019 18:58:39 »
Quote from: JennyGracie on 26/02/2019 15:56:08
Raph wants to know...

Does light ever get up to the speed of light? As it appears to be either reflected, or deflected by hot or cold gasses, or even gravity, on it's way through the universe. Or is the measurement a mere average, theoretical mathematical calculation ?

Can anyone help us out?
By definition light travels at the speed of light. However it doesn't always travel at c. If one using the coordinate speed of light then it travels at c only in an inertial coordinate system.

For a derivation see: http://www.newenglandphysics.org/physics_world/gr/c_in_gfield.htm

This was derived by Einstein in 1907 as I recall.

Note: One observer never really measures c. Its measured by two observers in close proximity. That's what local means.
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Offline mad aetherist

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #4 on: 27/02/2019 00:51:54 »
Quote from: JennyGracie on 26/02/2019 15:56:08
Raph wants to know...
Does light ever get up to the speed of light? As it appears to be either reflected, or deflected by hot or cold gasses, or even gravity, on it's way through the universe. Or is the measurement a mere average, theoretical mathematical calculation ?
Can anyone help us out?
I think that the replies here are off target, c does not depend simply on being in a good vacuum.  According to GR the law of the constancy of the velocity of light in vacuo which constitutes one of the two fundamental assumptions in SR cannot claim unlimited validity. A curvature of rays of light near the Sun can only take place when the velocity of propagation of light varies with position. Hencely SR is not valid for the speed of light in a gravitational field, where c is reduced to c'.  We need to take into account both the vacuum & the nearness of mass.
« Last Edit: 27/02/2019 01:00:32 by mad aetherist »
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Offline syhprum

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #5 on: 27/02/2019 01:40:49 »
In the non perfect vacuum of space would Neutrinos that have far less interaction with matter than photons travel faster ? 
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Offline Halc

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #6 on: 27/02/2019 02:55:30 »
Quote from: syhprum on 27/02/2019 01:40:49
In the non perfect vacuum of space would Neutrinos that have far less interaction with matter than photons travel faster ?
In theory yes, but in the conditions between us and the sources of such things, probably not.
Yes, they've measured neutrinos from supernovas well before the light, but that is mostly due to a delay in the light beginning its journey. The neutrinos are emitted with the core explosion but the light needs to wait for the shock wave of the core collapse to reach the surface of the star, which can take hours.
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Online evan_au

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #7 on: 27/02/2019 08:38:36 »
Quote from: syphrum
In the non perfect vacuum of space would Neutrinos that have far less interaction with matter than photons travel faster ?
The discovery of Neutrino Oscillation won the Nobel prize for physics in 2015. An implication of this is that neutrinos must travel slower than c.

Just how much slower is not known. We know the energy (distribution) of neutrinos produced by nuclear fusion in the Sun, or in nuclear fission reactors on Earth. But the actual speed of the neutrinos depends on the rest-mass of the neutrino, and as yet physicists only have a rough bound on this mass.

There was an attempt to measure the speed of neutrinos between the LHC in Switzerland, and a neutrino detector in the Italian Alps. But the final verdict was that it was impossible for this experiment to measure the difference in speed between the neutrinos and c, because they were so close. (Some initial excitement was traced to a loose connector in the equipment...)

See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino_oscillation

There are some places on Earth where massive particles travel faster than the speed of light in a physical medium:
- The blue glow around a nuclear reactor is due to neutrons traveling faster than the speed of light in water
- The Auger cosmic ray telescope detects Cherenkov radiation as the cosmic rays exceed the speed of light in air

See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherenkov_radiation
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Offline yor_on

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #8 on: 27/02/2019 14:05:02 »
Well, depends.

In a two way mirror experiment you get 'c'. You being at rest with your experimental setup, in a so called 'laboratory' ideally thought of as being in a same frame of reference. That experiment doesn't care for what you define as your relative motion. Defined this way it's strictly local. Another observer in a different uniform motion to yours will also find 'c'. So it's not a 'average mathematical solution', it's a defined speed.
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Offline yor_on

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #9 on: 27/02/2019 14:49:22 »
No Mad. The 'curvature' described by a 'photon' passing the sun is seen as either 'c' varying due to SpaceTime 'curvature', or as the 'delay' being a result of the geometry, in which case 'c' still will be 'c'. If you go by the definition in where all rays path is the straightest one possible in a 'curved universe' then this 'delay' is explainable, as I think.
=

In some weird way this seems to me as a proof of testing a one way path of light?
« Last Edit: 27/02/2019 14:52:43 by yor_on »
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Offline mad aetherist

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #10 on: 27/02/2019 21:01:00 »
Quote from: yor_on on 27/02/2019 14:49:22
No Mad. The 'curvature' described by a 'photon' passing the sun is seen as either 'c' varying due to SpaceTime 'curvature', or as the 'delay' being a result of the geometry, in which case 'c' still will be 'c'. If you go by the definition in where all rays path is the straightest one possible in a 'curved universe' then this 'delay' is explainable, as I think. = In some weird way this seems to me as a proof of testing a one way path of light?
I find it difficult to follow SR & GR. Einsteinians seem to contradict each other & contradict Einstein. Altho contradicting Einstein is difficult because he didnt detail or explain much of what he did.

Re bending & the speed of light i think Einstein said or might have said that light never bends its the spacetime that bends giving Earthlings the impression that light bends (veers)(curves), hencely what we have is a pseudo-bending of light near the Sun (which is what u said).

But u mentioned a photon passing the Sun. Einstein never talked of photons (altho i think he invented that word), in all of his SR & GR stuff he always talked of a ray of light (& i dont think he ever even said beam)(altho here we are of course at the mercy of the English translator).

Re light slowing as it approaches the Sun Einstein i think said that of the rays going past the Sun the ones that were closer went slower (due to the nearness of mass)(due to his spacious-chest-thortX)(in conjunction with his spinning-disc-thortX), hencely by applying the Huygens principle Einstein reckoned that the ray must bend.
Or, Einstein said that the ones that were closer seemed to go slower than the farther ones, & pseudo-slowing, to which u apply a pseudo-Huygens principle & get pseudo-bending.

I think that that slowing applied to the time portion of the bending of spacetime, being a half of the full bending. So then u need to add the space portion half of the bending. This involved a contraction or a pseudo-contraction of the metre-rods in a radial direction at the Sun. 

All of this slowing of light near the Sun or the pseudo-slowing of light was invoked by Einstein to ensure that the postulate of the constancy of the speed of light in SR near the Sun could be retained. Or it might be legitimate to call that there constancy a pseudo-constancy (i would have to have another look at the derivation)(it might depend on whether the derivation gives us gamma or whether gamma gives us the derivation).

This i think ensured a pseudo-constancy of the speed of light, giving a pseudo-slowing, giving a pseudo-bending. I hope that helped to pseudo-clear things up.  But i am a pseudo-scientist.
« Last Edit: 27/02/2019 21:25:15 by mad aetherist »
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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #11 on: 27/02/2019 22:04:07 »
Quote from: mad aetherist on 27/02/2019 21:01:00
I find it difficult to follow SR & GR.
It shows.

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Offline yor_on

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #12 on: 28/02/2019 00:10:01 »
Hey man
We're aficionados

We like physics, and we wonder.
I don't see anything wrong with that?
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Offline yor_on

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #13 on: 28/02/2019 00:11:50 »
As for photons I think you're correct. Just used it for simplicity. Not only you that read it, sort  of :)
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Offline yor_on

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #14 on: 02/03/2019 01:35:40 »
Let's do it this way Mad

Think of it as a 'field'. don't bother with defining limits to it.
Then think of 'c' as emanations in this field

to us it has a 'speed'
To the 'field' it's just emanations.
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Offline mad aetherist

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #15 on: 02/03/2019 06:39:55 »
Quote from: yor_on on 28/02/2019 00:11:50
As for photons I think you're correct. Just used it for simplicity. Not only you that read it, sort  of :)
Anyhow that gives me the opportunity to point out that Einsteinologists panic when confronted with a solitary photon. They dont know what to do.  They instinctively turn towards their Einsteinian library.  Surely there's a chapter in a book that can help.  Thinking thinking. No. The only thing that Einsteinologists can handle is waves of photons.  Waves are easy. U can apply Huygens to a wave.  But what about a solitary photon.  They are left with having to simply say that a single photon cant bend, it needs at least one mate. 

But my photaeno theory explains how one single solitary photon can bend.
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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #16 on: 02/03/2019 11:56:43 »
Quote from: mad aetherist on 02/03/2019 06:39:55
But my photaeno theory
It isn't a theory.
It's not even a hypothesis.
It's a wild guess.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_theory
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Offline mad aetherist

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #17 on: 02/03/2019 12:07:11 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2019 11:56:43
Quote from: mad aetherist on 02/03/2019 06:39:55
But my photaeno theory
It isn't a theory.
It's not even a hypothesis.
It's a wild guess.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_theory
So u have fallen in love with a theory that has a unique place in science, it belongs to the group of theories that were proven wrong before they were invented, in fact it is the only theory in that group, all other theories were proven wrong after they were invented.
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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #18 on: 02/03/2019 12:26:45 »
Quote from: mad aetherist on 02/03/2019 12:07:11
Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2019 11:56:43
Quote from: mad aetherist on 02/03/2019 06:39:55
But my photaeno theory
It isn't a theory.
It's not even a hypothesis.
It's a wild guess.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_theory
So u have fallen in love with a theory that has a unique place in science, it belongs to the group of theories that were proven wrong before they were invented, in fact it is the only theory in that group, all other theories were proven wrong after they were invented.
You do not have a theory.
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Offline jeffreyH

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Re: Does light actually travel at the speed of light?
« Reply #19 on: 02/03/2019 12:57:49 »
It has to be remembered that c is an absolute value. In this case the absolute value is connected to rest mass and therefore inertia. Absolutes are named in physics because they can be approached but never reached. Media and fields pervade the universe and limit the photon's ability to reach this absolute. However, the value of c is fundamental to many mathematical models of the physical world.
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