Pentcho Valev
2015-05-25 10:39:58 UTC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_light
"It is only possible to verify experimentally that the two-way speed of light (for example, from a source to a mirror and back again) is frame-independent, because it is impossible to measure the one-way speed of light (for example, from a source to a distant detector) without some convention as to how clocks at the source and at the detector should be synchronized."
It is easy to disprove the frame-independence of the speed of light in a one-way experiment, by measuring the Doppler frequency shift:
http://www.einstein-online.info/spotlights/doppler
Albert Einstein Institute: "The frequency of a wave-like signal - such as sound or light - depends on the movement of the sender and of the receiver. This is known as the Doppler effect. (...) Here is an animation of the receiver moving towards the source:
Loading Image... (stationary receiver)
Loading Image... (moving receiver)
By observing the two indicator lights, you can see for yourself that, once more, there is a blue-shift - the pulse frequency measured at the receiver is somewhat higher than the frequency with which the pulses are sent out. This time, the distances between subsequent pulses are not affected, but still there is a frequency shift: As the receiver moves towards each pulse, the time until pulse and receiver meet up is shortened. In this particular animation, which has the receiver moving towards the source at one third the speed of the pulses themselves, four pulses are received in the time it takes the source to emit three pulses." [end of quotation]
That is, the speed of the pulses relative to the stationary receiver is c=3d/t, but relative to the moving receiver is c'=4d/t=(4/3)c, where d is the distance between subsequent pulses and t is "the time it takes the source to emit three pulses".
Clearly Einstein's relativity is based on falsehood - the speed of light relative to the observer (receiver) varies with the speed of the observer. In camouflaged terms, Einstein said the same in 1954:
http://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/pdf/files/975547d7-2d00-433a-b7e3-4a09145525ca.pdf
Albert Einstein (1954): "I consider it entirely possible that physics cannot be based upon the field concept, that is on continuous structures. Then nothing will remain of my whole castle in the air, including the theory of gravitation, but also nothing of the rest of contemporary physics."
Pentcho Valev
"It is only possible to verify experimentally that the two-way speed of light (for example, from a source to a mirror and back again) is frame-independent, because it is impossible to measure the one-way speed of light (for example, from a source to a distant detector) without some convention as to how clocks at the source and at the detector should be synchronized."
It is easy to disprove the frame-independence of the speed of light in a one-way experiment, by measuring the Doppler frequency shift:
http://www.einstein-online.info/spotlights/doppler
Albert Einstein Institute: "The frequency of a wave-like signal - such as sound or light - depends on the movement of the sender and of the receiver. This is known as the Doppler effect. (...) Here is an animation of the receiver moving towards the source:
Loading Image... (stationary receiver)
Loading Image... (moving receiver)
By observing the two indicator lights, you can see for yourself that, once more, there is a blue-shift - the pulse frequency measured at the receiver is somewhat higher than the frequency with which the pulses are sent out. This time, the distances between subsequent pulses are not affected, but still there is a frequency shift: As the receiver moves towards each pulse, the time until pulse and receiver meet up is shortened. In this particular animation, which has the receiver moving towards the source at one third the speed of the pulses themselves, four pulses are received in the time it takes the source to emit three pulses." [end of quotation]
That is, the speed of the pulses relative to the stationary receiver is c=3d/t, but relative to the moving receiver is c'=4d/t=(4/3)c, where d is the distance between subsequent pulses and t is "the time it takes the source to emit three pulses".
Clearly Einstein's relativity is based on falsehood - the speed of light relative to the observer (receiver) varies with the speed of the observer. In camouflaged terms, Einstein said the same in 1954:
http://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/pdf/files/975547d7-2d00-433a-b7e3-4a09145525ca.pdf
Albert Einstein (1954): "I consider it entirely possible that physics cannot be based upon the field concept, that is on continuous structures. Then nothing will remain of my whole castle in the air, including the theory of gravitation, but also nothing of the rest of contemporary physics."
Pentcho Valev