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Because the speed of light depends on the properties of the material it is traveling through.In a vacuum it's c (in water it's about 3/4 c).We know the relevant properties of the vacuumhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_permittivityandhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_permeabilityand we can calculate the speed of lighthttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_wave_equationNone of that depends on anything to do with the source of the light.So the speed of light does not depend on the source.
Unless I am ,as usual mistaken..
Wherever the source of light, say from super-flying saucer,, is moving, 30% the speed of light,, moving forward, back, side ward, light is the same 186,000 miles per second.. Why? jsa 3.30.19
Quote from: jsaldea12 on 30/03/2019 13:18:04Wherever the source of light, say from super-flying saucer,, is moving, 30% the speed of light,, moving forward, back, side ward, light is the same 186,000 miles per second.. Why? jsa 3.30.19Because light in a vacuum travels at c, and in our universe c is a finite invariant speed. ( space and time are intertwined and the value c plays an important role in their relationship.) Its not just light, but anything that travels at c (gravitational waves, for example) also shares this trait.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 30/03/2019 14:28:25Because the speed of light depends on the properties of the material it is traveling through.Could one not say the same about the speed of sound in a medium..? .and yet in that case the speed of the sound wave does depend on the state of relative motion of the source....Unless I am ,as usual mistaken..
Because the speed of light depends on the properties of the material it is traveling through.
Quote from: geordief on 30/03/2019 14:55:23Quote from: Bored chemist on 30/03/2019 14:28:25Because the speed of light depends on the properties of the material it is traveling through.Could one not say the same about the speed of sound in a medium..? .and yet in that case the speed of the sound wave does depend on the state of relative motion of the source....Unless I am ,as usual mistaken..As @Bored chemist says you are mistaken, but it is a common mistake.A sound wave propagates at speed of sound in air independently of the speed of the source. What does vary is the speed of sound with the motion of the observer. If the observer is moving through the air they will measure a different speed to an observer who is stationary. The same is true if the air is moving, for example an observer in a balloon travelling with the wind vs an observer on the ground with the air moving relative to them.This doesn’t happen with light where the speed measured by the observer is independent of the observer’s motion.
The frequency does change though ,doesn't it? (the Doppler effect)
Is it possible (or useful) to say that the rate of propagation of em energy does vary with the relative motion of the observer?
Not only useful but essential. All energy measurement depends on motion and/or position of the observer.
Yes - sort of. There is no electromagnetic field inside a mumetal box, apart from the black-body photons emitted by the box itself. In principle, if you cool it to 0 K, even that will cease.
There seems to be some confusion in this thread. A photon is an oscillating electromagnetic field, which as Maxwell pointed out, is why light can propagate through a vacuum.
How was Maxwell able to show this?