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lovetruth
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A “light clock” consists of a mirror, a light source and a light detector. The light source and detector are very close to each other and both are at a distance ‘L’ from the mirror (or the mirror’s plane). In an inertial frame at rest, a light pulse is emitted from the light source perpendicularly towards the mirror; the light pulse is then reflected back from the mirror to the light detector. Thus, the time between a pulse of light to be emitted and detected is ‘2L/c’.
If the same “light clock” is moving with velocity ‘v’, the direction of the light pulse is shown inclined with respect to the light source in the diagrams.
http://users.powernet.co.uk/bearsoft/PictureGif/Ltclk.gif
http://galileo.phys.virginia.edu/classes/252/srelwhat_files/image017.gif
So my question is: why the direction of the light pulse or beam is inclined with respect to the source. Shouldn’t the light pulse just move perpendicularly to the mirror and not at some angle? Relativity theory tells that the speed of light is constant in any inertial frame but does not say that the direction of light should change with respect to the source. Thanks for any help in advance.
If the same “light clock” is moving with velocity ‘v’, the direction of the light pulse is shown inclined with respect to the light source in the diagrams.
http://users.powernet.co.uk/bearsoft/PictureGif/Ltclk.gif
http://galileo.phys.virginia.edu/classes/252/srelwhat_files/image017.gif
So my question is: why the direction of the light pulse or beam is inclined with respect to the source. Shouldn’t the light pulse just move perpendicularly to the mirror and not at some angle? Relativity theory tells that the speed of light is constant in any inertial frame but does not say that the direction of light should change with respect to the source. Thanks for any help in advance.
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