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...... If I have it straight, this is simply saying that a wave's speed is dependent on the properties of the medium in which it travels and not on the speed of the craft that caused it......
If only. There are still fools around who think light consists of compression waves. Or possibly shear waves.
Yes, I am afraid to say it, but this is a "straw man" argument.
Quote from: PmbPhy on 08/05/2016 18:48:42 Depending on what you mean you could be wrong. If you mean that if, in the inertial frame S, a beam of light was moving from along the x-axis in the positive direction with speed c and another beam was moving along the same x-axis in the negative direction with speed c then their relative speed of the two beams is 2c. What SR states is that that will be the same in any inertial frame of reference.
Quote from: arcmetal on 20/05/2016 22:09:56Yes, I am afraid to say it, but this is a "straw man" argument.I am somewhat confused by this statement.My post was intended to correct a false assumption you were making:
Normally I don't bother too much if people are getting their physics wrong, but in this case I could see it was leading you to false conclusions and that is unfair.My only intention was to be helpful.
Upon reading your whole original post, it follows a classic definition of the straw man argument, which is that you win the argument by arguing against different concepts while sidestepping the original concept.
.. I'm not so into debating theories of physics. I am quite happy to let others believe or understand whatever they want, my only concern is in what I understand...
You keep repeating that the ground state of the universe is the speed of light. Since a ground state is the lowest energy state this cannot be true. All velocities would have to tend naturally towards light speed which is not true. Please review classical mechanics and maybe quantum mechanics before continuing on this erroneous course.
Quote from: arcmetal on 22/05/2016 02:31:54Upon reading your whole original post, it follows a classic definition of the straw man argument, which is that you win the argument by arguing against different concepts while sidestepping the original concept.It would appear that we may have differing opinions about what was the original concept.
To me you were drawing the conclusion that "a wave's speed is dependent on the properties of the medium in which it travels and not on the speed of the craft that caused it" and you were basing that on the post you quoted which gave false information on the behaviour of sound in air. It also drew false conclusions about the behaviour of light in a medium based on the behaviour of sound. So the original concept I was discussing was the false information contained in that post, which is so full of misunderstandings that I felt it needed a full answer.
Yet coming back to the first example take car (a) travelling at 60 kmh is 1 km distant from car (b) travelling at 30kmh. Suppose that at this time car(a) activates a siren and also suppose that the speed of sound is 340m/s . At what time will the sound reach car(b) supposing that car(a) and car(b) continue to approach each other at the same speeds. Would Galilean transformations apply and the combined speed with which car(a) and car(b) together with siren sound be 16.6m/s + 340m/s + 8.3m/s = 365m/s approx and they would meet at 1000/365 = 2.75 seconds. The answer is NO. Because the speed of sound is invariant in a medium it means that it does not obey Galilean transformations, thus the time taken for the sound of the siren to reach car (b) would be 1000/340 = 2.95 secs. During this time car (b) would have travelled 24.5 m approx. This is a completely unexpected result, until one realizes that light also exhibits such invariance:
You & I have discussed elsewhere that there are a number of different media with different properties, if light does travel in a medium it is important that we understand what those properties are and not draw false conclusions based on analogies with inappropriate media. To do so takes us back to the pre M&M days and, as you pointed out, we need to move on from there or the concept of a medium will always be tainted by the misconceptions of that time.
I've reread McQueen's post in his thread in New Theories: "What is the speed of light really?",McQueen says:Quote from: McQueen on 16/05/2016 12:25:23Yet coming back to the first example take car (a) travelling at 60 kmh is 1 km distant from car (b) travelling at 30kmh. Suppose that at this time car(a) activates a siren and also suppose that the speed of sound is 340m/s . At what time will the sound reach car(b) supposing that car(a) and car(b) continue to approach each other at the same speeds. Would Galilean transformations apply and the combined speed with which car(a) and car(b) together with siren sound be 16.6m/s + 340m/s + 8.3m/s = 365m/s approx and they would meet at 1000/365 = 2.75 seconds. The answer is NO. Because the speed of sound is invariant in a medium it means that it does not obey Galilean transformations, thus the time taken for the sound of the siren to reach car (b) would be 1000/340 = 2.95 secs. During this time car (b) would have travelled 24.5 m approx. This is a completely unexpected result, until one realizes that light also exhibits such invariance:...and I find nothing odd with respect to his description of the speed of sound in a medium. He mentions other stuff about Galilean transformations, and about properties of the aether in that post, but as it pertains to the speed of sound in air his statements are rather of mundane things that everyone holds in common.... adding speeds of two approaching cars, speed of sound from a siren, nothing real spectacular there.If you ignore his other statements in that post about the aether and such, that is fine, not everyone believes it, but as to the items describing sound waves traveling on air I find nothing out of the ordinary. It was his simple idea that the speed of sound depends on nothing else but the properties of the medium and has no regard for the speed of the transmitters or receivers is what I found interesting.... so yeah, I am not seeing the: "false information on the behaviour of sound in air".
The calculation: best understood by imagining still air where the sound from the siren is in the same frame of reference as the ground. When the siren starts the wavefront will travel relative to the ground at 340m/s, but car (b) will also be travelling towards it (through the medium) at 16.6m/s, so car and wavefront are moving at a closing speed of 356.6m/s. I'll leave you to work out the intercept time and distance, but you will see that from the reference frame of car (b) - the observer - Galilean transforms do apply and the speed of sound in air is not invariant.
Ah, so then you agree that the speed of sound is still 340 m/s in the medium, thus dependent on the medium properties.
(I think you meant a closing speed of 323.4 m/s)
Quote from: Colin2B on 23/05/2016 19:06:37Wise decision, the conclusions reached here are flawed http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=66803.0Talking through your hat as usual...!
Wise decision, the conclusions reached here are flawed http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=66803.0
Quote from: arcmetal on 24/05/2016 00:39:00(I think you meant a closing speed of 323.4 m/s)How do you work that out?Speed is the rate of change of distance. If a car and wavefront are moving towards each other the closing speed is the sum of their speeds. 323.4m/s would be the case if car (b) was moving away from the wavefront.
Yes, if by closing speed you mean car (b) is heading into the wavefront, it adds up the speeds....
but moving away is still the same as "heading into", moving in "opposite directions", in which case you still add the speeds, and not subract --> so its not 323.4m/s.
We get (340-16.6) 323.4m/s if the car and wavefront are moving in the same direction.
Quote from: arcmetal on 24/05/2016 23:57:49We 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.