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The light must return for you to be aware of a distant event....The fundamental problem is, you are present at the local events, emission and detection. You are not present at the distant reflection event. ...
Not really. I go to the camera later and look at the film. The camera was (sort of) "aware" of the event, and it recorded it as well as recording the local time of that event.There is no "reflection event".
Quote from: Bored chemist on 29/07/2017 22:07:56Not really. I go to the camera later and look at the film. The camera was (sort of) "aware" of the event, and it recorded it as well as recording the local time of that event.There is no "reflection event".Assuming you think you are moving:For the camera to record the background event requires a 2-way trip. How do you know the difference in the clock there and your local clock?
Did you actually read what I posted about the scenario I'm talking about?It's the one where I'm at rest (at least in my frame of reference) and where there are two synchronised cameras which record a singe event from different distances.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 31/07/2017 19:25:39Did you actually read what I posted about the scenario I'm talking about?It's the one where I'm at rest (at least in my frame of reference) and where there are two synchronised cameras which record a singe event from different distances.Look at the right side of the graphic in #78. If someone in the theoretical 'fixed frame' U was observing your moving frame, with a flash from you to a distant object, on a long leg out and returning on a short leg, using SR conventon, you in your pseudo rest frame assigns equal legs, with the same round trip time. The answer will be the usual, light speed is c. You can check the Lorentz/SR coordinate transformations to verify that x'/t' = x/t = c, where the primed coordinates are your measurements. That is the very reason you can assume a pseudo rest frame. Pseudo because there is no real rest frame (that can be used as a common reference for measurements). It's not a conspiracy, it's because light propagation is constant and independent of source.
Look at the right side of the graphic in #78.
Quote from: phyti on 01/08/2017 20:31:20Look at the right side of the graphic in #78. If I look at it, the first thing I see is that it's rather unclear- just a bunch of lines and letters.The second thing I see is that it's not a representation of the scenario I put forward.Why is everyone so reluctant to answer the simple question I asked?If I get 2 clocks, sync them, separate them slowly enough that the time dilation is small and put them in front of 2 video cameras.I the set off a flash- nearer to one camera than the other.I look at the video and I note when the flash arrives at each camera.I know the difference in paths and I know the difference in times.So, what will I get if I divide the distance by the time?
So, what will I get if I divide the distance by the time?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 01/08/2017 21:36:48So, what will I get if I divide the distance by the time?You'll get the apparent speed of light for a round trip. Your synchronisation method tunes your apparatus to its speed of movement through space such that your measurement hides that movement.
A trip "round" what?
Incidentally, from my perspective the apparatus isn't moving through space: no tuning needed.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/08/2017 20:29:11A trip "round" what?A round-trip is a 2-way trip.QuoteIncidentally, from my perspective the apparatus isn't moving through space: no tuning needed.That's the whole issue - you're assuming you're stationary up front, you're synchronising your clocks to fit with your idea that you're stationary, and then you're measuring the "one-way" speed of light on that false basis. You cannot move your clock infinitely slowly because infinite slowness won't move it at all, so you have to move it as some speed greater than zero, and while you are moving it there are time dilation effects which tune your clock synchronisation in such a way as to maintain the illusion that your system is stationary. Your measurement of the distance travelled by the moving and "stationary" clocks is an unknown because you can't tell how far they're really moving while you move one of your clocks away from the other. If the system is moving at very high speed, both clocks may have moved a lightyear and the time dilation difference between the "moved" and "unmoved" clocks will be more severe.
I've read your posts from #70 on, trying to get a picture of your setup.
If you provide distances for all the objects involved as measured from a common location it's easier to visualize.
A round trip implies that you go somewhere and then come back.At what stage in the process I described does anything come back?
and as I keep pointing out, I can make the relativistic effects there as small as I like.
I can also check that each sleeper is the same distance as the last one- because I have a ruler.As long as I go slowly, the length of the ruler is as near constant as I like.
"you're assuming you're stationary up front"And, once again, from my point of view, it's not an assumption, it's an observation.
For the sake of discussion, let's assume I start by destroying the rest of the universe.
I have spoken of two errors, one of which is larger the faster you move one clock while not moving the other clock (which you assume to be at rest). That error is real and predictable, so it can be corrected for.
The whole business of trying to measure the one-way speed of light necessarily brings in the idea of an absolute frame if you imagine that light can travel relative to you at a speed other than c, so of course we have to explore this on that basis.
If we assume that the
Now, here's the problem. If the clocks are moving so slowly that there is no error of the second type creeping in (due to different time dilations applying to different clocks while they're being moved apart), they must stay in sync in BOTH frames. They cannot possibly be ticking simultaneously in both frames though, so how can they get out of sync in the absolute frame where we watch the system moving past us?
I have spoken of two errors, one of which is larger the faster you move one clock while not moving the other clock (which you assume to be at rest). That error is real and predictable, so it can be corrected for. Even if you move the clock extremely slowly, an error of that kind will remain - all you can do is decrease its size until it becomes small enough that you have less need to bother making a correction. In denying the existence of that error, you are only going to confuse people who can see that it must exist.
Quote from: David Cooper on 27/07/2017 21:52:10I have spoken of two errors, one of which is larger the faster you move one clock while not moving the other clock (which you assume to be at rest). That error is real and predictable, so it can be corrected for.There is no "error."
Even from a LET framework all reference frames still work just fine even if ε=1/2 only for one of them. Furthermore, LET doesn't give you the option to know a true rest frame so you can't "correct" for the “error.”
You first must do one thing... CHOSE A CONVENTION.
Everything else you show is a result of this choice including time dilation.
Unless you're God or you know how to break Lorentz Invariance, there is no error just choice of convention.
The one-way speed of light is set BEFORE we even consider time dilation by choice of convention.
Quote from: David Cooper on 27/07/2017 21:52:10The whole business of trying to measure the one-way speed of light necessarily brings in the idea of an absolute frame if you imagine that light can travel relative to you at a speed other than c, so of course we have to explore this on that basis.No, Einstein just chose ε =1/2. He chose it because it made the math easier, but he could have chosen ε =1/4, ε =1000, or ε =1/1000. You could have a convention where you always choose ε = 1/4 for your point of view. You could even make a block universe where ε =1/4 for your own viewpoint.
That ε can be arbitrarily chosen is good enough. I don't need to have the extra assumption that ε is different in an absolute sense for every frame. SR believers simply do not believe this at all. I know you like LET which is fine but you're opening an entire can of worms that is unnecessary to prove that we can't measure the one-way speed of light WITHOUT referring to an arbitrary convention.
Now you can personally think that one convention is "true" but you cannot prove it.
Now I personally think it's weird that people automatically assume ε=1/2 for them no matter what (often in an absolute sense) forcing them to look at other frames with ε ≠ 1/2 at least from their chosen perspective. However, I can't stop them from doing this because it mathematically works. Shoving LET down their throats doesn't work. I can point out that ε =1/4 etc would also work and that ε=1/2 is arbitrarily chosen in SR.
Quote from: David Cooper on 27/07/2017 21:52:10If we assume that theYou mean if you assume a convention? Stop, that's all you need to say to prove the one-way speed of light is unknown without a convention.
Quote from: David Cooper on 27/07/2017 21:52:10Now, here's the problem. If the clocks are moving so slowly that there is no error of the second type creeping in (due to different time dilations applying to different clocks while they're being moved apart), they must stay in sync in BOTH frames. They cannot possibly be ticking simultaneously in both frames though, so how can they get out of sync in the absolute frame where we watch the system moving past us?You're invoking an absolute frame again when all anyone must do is show that ε is arbitrarily chosen. I don't care if you use LET or SR both set ε arbitrarily. Both assume a framework we can't verify. One by forming a block universe where ε=1/2 everywhere locally and the other via an absolute rest frame where ε=1/2 absolutely for only one frame. The underlying reason behind our ability to choose is we have no way to tell what ε equals because whatever we choose it doesn't alter experiments.
We CHOOSE a plane of simultaneity.
Sure, clocks moving in other reference frames time dilate moving in one direction but ONLY after we assume our choice of convention.
t'/t = f'/f = (1 - v/c) / γ = γ / (1 + v/c) = (1 - a/c) / (1 + b/c) γb/γa where v = (a + b) / (1 + a b /c²) Time dilation could be : τ = t / γ or τ = γ t or τ = γb/γa t these are all different. Given a t, τ could be 0 to infinity.LET says we can't locate the absolute rest frame so it also chooses a convention based exactly on the math above. SR does the same thing based on the math above.
QuoteI have spoken of two errors, one of which is larger the faster you move one clock while not moving the other clock (which you assume to be at rest). That error is real and predictable, so it can be corrected for. Even if you move the clock extremely slowly, an error of that kind will remain - all you can do is decrease its size until it becomes small enough that you have less need to bother making a correction. In denying the existence of that error, you are only going to confuse people who can see that it must exist.Why do you keep bringing in "errors of the second type?"
If an absolute rest frame exists such that ε=1/2 only absolutely relative to that reference frame, then clocks moving at v still work normally. They may run slower but that's not an "error" as the clocks are working as they should.
There aren't two sources of errors there's time dilation and that's it. As an object moves at v with a specific time dilation then the clocks would get out of sync. How much they get out of sync one-way depends on distance at a specific v AFTER we choose the "rest frame."
t' = (t - v x/c²) / γ Let t = 0 then we have t' = v x/c² / γ → t' is proportional to x as v → c γ → 0 The above isn't a "second error." Time dilation gets clocks out of sync regardless. You're assuming a "first error" relative to an arbitrarily set absolute rest frame (at least from our point of view) and a second error relative to another arbitrary frame moving at velocity v. Both “errors” are relative to whatever frame of reference/convention we choose.
You can account for this “error” exactly but ONLY after assuming a convention.
You can make the “error” arbitrarily small (slow clock transport) but ONLY with respect to a chosen convention. Other conventions would have the “error” significantly larger (in terms of the speed of light it could be infinitely off with another convention; simultaneity on the other hand is bounded by the two-way speed of light).
The one-way speed of light is literally chosen by convention in our mathematics.
If it does have a definite value for a specific reference frame like both SR AND LET claim then we simply have no way to measure it.
If you're doing this on one planet and your cousin is doing the same thing on another planet moving relative to yours, both of you are making the same claim to be stationary, and at least one of you is being fooled.