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Accuracy isn't the primary concern here: what matters is whether you get the same result with the beam travelling in either direction. If you are worried about loss of synchronism (which I have minimised by driving the system symmetrically from the center of the axle) you can try spinning it clockwise and anticlockwise and take the mean.A bit of diffraction isn't a problem. We are only looking for the maximum of intensity versus speed of rotation, not an absolute value of intensity.
In principle, any speed difference will be detectable.
Now fire the beam from B to A. if the speed of light is invariant with direction, maximum transmission will occur at the same rate of rotation but may be brighter or dimmer than the AB value depending on the phase difference between the wheels.
Not if you do the experiment in space. Nor if you align the apparatus north-south. If you get the same answer east-west, you have proved the nonexistence of aether.
The "space" machine does not rotate about any axis perpendicular to the main axle. If we do the experiment on the earth's surface with north-south orientation, we can measure c in both directions with equal (if any) Sagnac shifts.
Hopefully not, but you'd expect a change in wavelength.
If you think wave/particle duality is meaningful, you are barking up a tree that was felled a century ago.
the underlying principles that led to the concept of wave-particle duality are still valid and essential for understanding the quantum world.
Quote from: mxplxxx on 19/07/2024 02:11:17the underlying principles that led to the concept of wave-particle duality are still valid and essential for understanding the quantum world.That statement is about as wrong as it can be, and underlies about half of the misapprehensions that find their way into this forum.