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You didn't.But, unless there are circumstances where they are invalid then it doesn't matter that I made them.Pointing out that I'm making an assumption is only worthwhile if that assumption is, or might be, wrong.
Generalizations of Lorentz transformations with anisotropic one-way speedsA synchronization scheme proposed by Reichenbach and Grünbaum, which they called ε-synchronization, was further developed by authors such as Edwards (1963),[48] Winnie (1970),[17] Anderson and Stedman (1977), who reformulated the Lorentz transformation without changing its physical predictions.[1][2] For instance, Edwards replaced Einstein's postulate that the one-way speed of light is constant when measured in an inertial frame with the postulate:The two way speed of light in a vacuum as measured in two (inertial) coordinate systems moving with constant relative velocity is the same regardless of any assumptions regarding the one-way speed.[48]So the average speed for the round trip remains the experimentally verifiable two-way speed, whereas the one-way speed of light is allowed to take the form in opposite directions:c± = c / (1 ± κ) where κ is any value between 0 and 1.As demonstrated by Hans Reichenbach and Adolf Grünbaum, Einstein synchronization is only a special case of a more broader synchronization scheme, which leaves the two-way speed of light invariant, but allows for different one-way speeds. The formula for Einstein synchronization is modified by replacing ½ with ε:[4]t2 = t1 + ε (t3 - t1)ε can have values between 0 and 1. It was shown that this scheme can be used for observationally equivalent reformulations of the Lorentz transformation, see Generalizations of Lorentz transformations with anisotropic one-way speeds.
As required by the experimentally proven equivalence between Einstein synchronization and slow clock-transport synchronization, which requires knowledge of time dilation of moving clocks, the same non-standard synchronizations must also affect time dilation. It was indeed pointed out that time dilation of moving clocks depends on the convention for the one-way velocities used in its formula.[17] That is, time dilation can be measured by synchronizing two stationary clocks A and B, and then the readings of a moving clock C are compared with them. Changing the convention of synchronization for A and B makes the value for time dilation (like the one-way speed of light) directional dependent. The same conventionality also applies to the influence of time dilation on the Doppler effect.[18] Only when time dilation is measured on closed paths, it is not conventional and can unequivocally be measured like the two-way speed of light. Time dilation on closed paths was measured in the Hafele–Keating experiment and in experiments on the Time dilation of moving particles such as Bailey et al. (1977).[19] Thus the so-called twin paradox occurs in all transformations preserving the constancy of the two-way speed of light.
It is written, "the measured speed of light is c", A. Einstein.aka the 2nd postulate.Let's elaborate on the simultaneity convention."That light requires the same time to traverse the same path A to M as for the path B to M is in reality neither a supposition nor a hypothesis about the physical nature of light, but a stipulation which I can make of my own freewill in order to arrive at a definition of simultaneity."Relativity The Special and the General TheoryAlbert Einstein 1961 Crown Publishers Inc. pg 23aka, physics by decree.
Then we know that you are not playing by the rules I specified where everyone is walking or cycling round on the surface of the Earth.
Quote from: Thebox on 17/07/2017 01:20:23To test the present speed of light one way we can simply use a strobe set to flash once per second. We can then have a detector (radiometer) a set distance away to detect the light.How are you going to time it? Are you going to use one clock or two?If you use one clock and place it by the strobe unit, how long does it take for the information to get back from the detector to the clock once the light has reached the detector? That signal returns at the speed of light, so you're actually timing the two-way speed of light (i.e. a round trip).If you use two clocks and have one by the strobe and the other by the detector, you need to synchronise the two clocks, and how do you synchronise them? Any viable method of synchronisation that you use will automatically lead to you measuring the two-way speed of light instead of the one-way speed of light.
To test the present speed of light one way we can simply use a strobe set to flash once per second. We can then have a detector (radiometer) a set distance away to detect the light.
I am not using any clocks to time it in the above. The strobe flashes 1 flash per second, the detector then detects and the detection of the pulses should be in correlation to the strobe at distance x, if it isn't , then c is not c as it stands at the moment and Maxwell would be wrong . i.e the detects should be 1 second apart.
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.
I am not using any clocks to time it in the above.
The strobe flashes 1 flash per second, the detector then detects and the detection of the pulses should be in correlation to the strobe at distance x, if it isn't , then c is not c as it stands at the moment and Maxwell would be wrong . i.e the detects should be 1 second apart.
Quote from: Thebox on 21/07/2017 10:41:12I am not using any clocks to time it in the above.Let me get this straight - you're timing something without using any kind of clock?QuoteThe strobe flashes 1 flash per second, the detector then detects and the detection of the pulses should be in correlation to the strobe at distance x, if it isn't , then c is not c as it stands at the moment and Maxwell would be wrong . i.e the detects should be 1 second apart.So, you've got a flash every second at the strobe and a flash being detected every second at the detector, so how do you get from there to a measurement of the time taken for the light to get from the strobe to the detector?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 19/07/2017 22:30:41Then we know that you are not playing by the rules I specified where everyone is walking or cycling round on the surface of the Earth.?What are you even writing about? I was making a point about the math. The size of the frequency shift doesn't matter to the point whatsoever. You completely missed the point that t' and τ are completely different variables. I don't care if you're "walking or cycling" you still don't know the one-way speed of light without using a clock synchronization convention.However, I'm glad you're getting your exercise.I've got questions but let me set the questions up. Say there's a clock positioned at A and another at B when those clocks remain stationary on the surface of the Earth such that one is at sea level (A) and the other (B) 1,000 feet above sea level their reference frame feels acceleration and clock B will run faster than clock A. Using the Equivalence Principle, I can accelerate two clocks connected by a 1,000 foot steel cable. If I accelerate in the direction of clock B then clock B will run faster when observed by clock A during the acceleration. I can accelerate slow enough such that when I inspect the cable later it will be the same length and in the same condition it originally was. I therefore conclude the length remains 1,000 feet between ships when finished (at least as observed by me). When the acceleration stops clock B will again run at the same rate as observed by clock A (this observed time is t').If I assume Einstein Clock Synchronization (one-way speed of light is c for my frame) then clocks that were synchronized before the acceleration are now out of sync. However, my clocks remain synchronized to the original reference frame. Therefore, I decide of my own freewill to move either the rear clock's time reading forward or the front clock's time reading backwards to fix the "problem" I perceive based on my convention. I choose to re-synchronize the clocks because I assume the one-way speed of light is constant in my new reference frame. I had assumed the one-way speed of light was constant in my old reference frame but after I choose to re-synchronize my clocks the old assumption is no longer valid. I decided I didn't like my original choice to keep the math simpler.Questions:1) Why couldn't I just keep my original clock synchronization? Why do I have to re-synchronize?2) How is my synchronization not based on convention? 3) If I did attempt to measure the one-way speed of light using my original synchronization it would be different in different directions. If I'm lazy and I keep my original synchronization why is this less valid then re-synchronizing? Why do I have to reset spatially separated clocks after every acceleration? Does nature know that it needs to re-synchronize its clocks after accelerations?Say you're in a lab that changed velocity by .8c a while ago and the scientists in charge of the lab re-synchronizes the clocks. You measure the one-way speed of light and get exactly c. You get excited thinking you just measured the one-way speed. You also don't realize that the scientist reset the clocks... You attempt to justify the re-synchronization. However, careful analysis of slow clock transport and light synchronization you find that those are identical. To your surprise you go back into the system and restore the original clock settings and the one-way speed of light is 1.8γ c in one direction and .2γ c in the other (where γ = 1/√(1 - .8²) = 1.67 the gamma is due to time dilation with respect to the original frame chosen as a reference; also remember v = d/t). c± = c / (1 ± κ) If κ = 2/3 then c - = c / (1 -2/3) = 3c = 1.8γ c and c+ = c / (1 +2/3) = 1/3c = .2γ c (predicted value without resync) Why is slow clock transport the same as fast clock transport? Take a light clock where every bounce of the light between two mirrors is one tick. As you slowly transport the clock from A to B you realize something amazing... you just sent a light beam from A to B just like light synchronization does. You sent the light in a zigzag pattern but careful analysis of the math shows that it doesn't matter because the light still goes through a net horizontal distance from A to B. ALL clocks will give the exact same result because they are all more alike than people think. We are after all made out of a bunch of sub atomic particles interacting via the fundamental forces. If you don't believe this than careful analysis of experiments proves it (it's an experimentally verified fact). Hell, Quantum Field Theory predicts that particles like electrons, quarks, weak bosons, etc would move at light speed if not for their interaction with the Higgs Field and/or the EM field and/or strong field (forming a rest mass). This interaction doesn't slow down the fundamental two-way speed of their "fields" it just gets them "stuck in the mud" via very complex interactions with other fields. This is often called "self energy." Gravity, the EM field, and the strong force all have a two-way speed c. Careful analysis shows that you quickly start to run out of "slow clock transports" that aren't really "light synchronizations" in disguise. Experiments and Relativity also verifies this fact.They discuss QFT in this series. //www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQ1WZ-eJW8YFinally, FYI even tiny changes in velocity like walking or cycling changes the speed of light if you don't re-sync the clocks. We do measure this difference as the speed of light is only c locally in General Relativity (small but measurable). Einstein stipulates that you need to re-synchronize your clocks locally. That is you need to keep re-syncing your clocks after every acceleration so they are temporarily localized. In a gravity field or when under acceleration the speed of light is only c in a small enough volume around every point (spatially localized; how local this needs to be depends on the acceleration/curvature). This is the Law of Physics called Local Lorentz Covariance (the heart of GR and included in all modern mainstream theories). We always can assume a convention where we can measure c locally in all directions.
In the limit of a low speed, low acceleration, low gravity situation, we can measure the one-way speed of light to an arbitrarily high accuracy.
If you have someone moving WRT us so fast that they perceive our 1 MHz clock as 20MHz then that's a different scenario.
You are plainly better at the maths than I am.
So, calculate the answer to the question I set earlier. If the one way speed of light is the same as C then m will be 10,000.What value do you calculate (for simplicity assume that C is exactly 300,000,000 m/s, the frame rate is (locally) exactly 1 million frames per second and the separation is exactly million metres.)I'd expect m to be 10,000.
If I'm on a spaceship moving through space at high speed in a direction which we'll call "north" (for want of a better word), I can go to the middle of the ship and synchronise three clocks there. I can then send two of the clocks to the ends of the ship (one to each) such that we now have three synchronised clock spaced apart with one perhaps 50m to the north of the middle one and another 50m to the south of the middle one. By moving the clocks in this way though, their synchronisation has actually changed - the southern clock's time is running ahead of the other two, and the northern clock is lagging most (but they are back to ticking at the same rate as each other). If I now send a signal from the middle clock to the other two, both those clocks will record the same time of arrival even though the signal takes longer to reach the northern clock.[Because a clock's ticking rate slows more dramatically the faster it is moved through space, moving the clocks more quickly to the ends of the ship will lead to both of them lagging further behind the middle clock, but the lag will be the same for both. You will therefore get different times from them by changing the speeds of relocation, but despite this, both the northern and southern clock will always agree on the time taken for a signal to reach them from the middle clock.]
That's a nice story.Do you have an opinion on the value of m in the experiment I suggested?
no, you are measuring time by counting at different speeds which is wrong.
Quote from: Thebox on 23/07/2017 23:19:02no, you are measuring time by counting at different speeds which is wrong.I'm discussing synchronising three clocks at a single location, then moving two of them away in opposite directions and using these synchronised clocks to time a signal sent at the speed of light from the middle clock to the outer two. The clocks are all counting at the same speed as each other, but they weren't doing so while two of them were being relocated.
The clocks are never out of synchronisation if the clock is being used correctly i.e 1=1
I understand the distance contractions/expansions would cause an issue in timing, sorry I thought you were trying to still say there was a time dilation.