- #71
JesseM
Science Advisor
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The post you link to said nothing about a tube, he was there talking about a simpler scenario with no tube involved. He introduced the tube in post #7 where he said:starthaus said:Then you did not understand his post, so we have been talking about different things all along.
If the tube is "perpendicular to the source motion", I take that to mean that the source is moving relative to the tube. But just to make sure, I asked Austin0 about this directly in post #32, and he replied in post #33 (the bolding was his):4) Given the picture I have so far it would seem impossible for any photon to have a straight linear path orthogonal to the emitter motion.
That if there is a light detector at the end of a long light absorbtive tube aligned directly perpendicular to the source motion that it would seem impossible for a photon to reach the detector??
So you see, Austin0 was clearly talking about a case where the source was moving relative to the tube, and that's the case I was considering when I talked about the light hitting the side of the tube.Austin0 said:The second case.JesseM said:Does the light detector have the same velocity as the source, so it always remains directly above the source? Or is the light detector at rest in the frame where the source is moving horizontally, so the source is only directly underneath the detector at the moment it emits the light? In the first case the light will hit the detector, in the second case it won't.
Like I said, though, I'm happy to consider your alternate scenario where the source was at rest relative to the tube, and both the light beam and the tube were oriented vertically in the rest frame of the tube/source. In this case, I agreed with you that in the frame of an observer traveling in the horizontal direction, the light beam is moving at an angle of arccos(Beta) from the vertical axis. I also agree that in this scenario, the light never hits the wall of the tube, regardless of what frame we use to analyze the situation. However, if your odd comment "It is as if the tube has been cut up into infinitelly small transversal sections and the sections have been re-arranged diagonally" amounts to a claim that the tube itself is not still oriented vertically in the frame of this observer (in terms of the coordinate positions it occupies at a given time in the observer's frame, not in terms of visual appearances), then as I already said this is complete nonsense. I can show why it's nonsense with some basic algebra if you or anyone else actually believes this, but if you won't confirm that this is what you're arguing I won't bother.
edit: I see you added the following comment:
In your altered scenario (not Austin0's scenario), of course I agree with all these things. In my previous post #68 I already made the following comments about your altered scenario:This is getting really boring, do you agree that the light beam is aberrated by the angle [tex]arccos(\beta)[/tex] in the observer frame? Do you agree that the light beam does not touch the walls in either frame? Do you agree that the light beam hits the detector at the end of the tube in both frames?
So since cos(angle) = adjacent/hypotenuse, for the angle theta between the light's path and the z-axis we have cos(theta) = sqrt(c^2 - v^2)*t'/ct' = sqrt(1 - v^2/c^2) = Beta. So yes, I agree the angle theta in this frame would be arccos(Beta).
Anyway, it's easy to see why the light doesn't hit the side in the frame of the moving observer
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