- #1
Killtech
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I've been thinking about the Michelson–Morley experiment lately and how it would play out with acoustic waves clearly showing the presence of a sonic-ether (well, at least in the case it's not enclosed - the air through which the sound travels has to be exposed to the outside wind ofc). And then i compared it to how it works for light. Anyway, argument is pretty straight forward and i remember learning it back in school so many years ago.
But going through the (over a century old) argument again with a little more knowledge i actually find an issue that i didn't see anywhere mentioned: The central premise of the experiment is that the distances of the mirrors in the experiment are fixed and well know. Of course that seems such a trivial thing to assume for an experimenter that it doesn't need to be mentioned... but we are trying to detected a "luminuferious ether" that is supposed to affect the speed of light and therefore the Maxwell equations. And that's actually a problem because the interferometer is build out of many atoms in a solid grid the properties of which are supposed to guarantee to preserve the distances between all mirrors. perhaps not something that was clear when the experiment was performed but since Schrödingers atomic model (discovered 1926 after the ether was dismissed) we know atoms entirely depend on Maxwells electromagnetic interaction to get into shape... so for me it looks like the argument is incomplete if the effect of a hypothetical ether drag on the mirror distances isn't taken into account. And given that the speed of light is a defining property of atoms i just don't understand how it can be neglected.
Unfortunately i don't know of any quantum mechanical model which allows an ether assumption as to properly calculate the impact. But i can try to make a qualitative argument: For example one can look at the electric potential of a point-like charge (i.e. atomic nucleus) under an ether wind assumption. I would think that the planes of equal electric potential should be the same as the planes defined by equal light travel time from the core (one way or rather two way?). That yields an oval (or ellipsoid?) shape with diameters along the different axis being stretched by factors corresponding to the travel times of light along in the interferometer axes. The electron orbitals are the solutions for that potential and define the shape of their atom and should they follow the very same deformation then wouldn't this just exactly cancel out any measurable effect?
One could of course try guarantee the distance of mirrors using gravity instead of solid matter (i.e. a gravity orbit). But unfortunately gravity is assumed to propagate at the very same speed hence leading to the very same dependence on ##c## iff both forces are affected by an ether in identical fashion.
So at a native second glance it seems like the experiment might try to compare the directional properties of the speed of light with itself hence being unable to detect anything. How is that actually resolved in modern physics?
But going through the (over a century old) argument again with a little more knowledge i actually find an issue that i didn't see anywhere mentioned: The central premise of the experiment is that the distances of the mirrors in the experiment are fixed and well know. Of course that seems such a trivial thing to assume for an experimenter that it doesn't need to be mentioned... but we are trying to detected a "luminuferious ether" that is supposed to affect the speed of light and therefore the Maxwell equations. And that's actually a problem because the interferometer is build out of many atoms in a solid grid the properties of which are supposed to guarantee to preserve the distances between all mirrors. perhaps not something that was clear when the experiment was performed but since Schrödingers atomic model (discovered 1926 after the ether was dismissed) we know atoms entirely depend on Maxwells electromagnetic interaction to get into shape... so for me it looks like the argument is incomplete if the effect of a hypothetical ether drag on the mirror distances isn't taken into account. And given that the speed of light is a defining property of atoms i just don't understand how it can be neglected.
Unfortunately i don't know of any quantum mechanical model which allows an ether assumption as to properly calculate the impact. But i can try to make a qualitative argument: For example one can look at the electric potential of a point-like charge (i.e. atomic nucleus) under an ether wind assumption. I would think that the planes of equal electric potential should be the same as the planes defined by equal light travel time from the core (one way or rather two way?). That yields an oval (or ellipsoid?) shape with diameters along the different axis being stretched by factors corresponding to the travel times of light along in the interferometer axes. The electron orbitals are the solutions for that potential and define the shape of their atom and should they follow the very same deformation then wouldn't this just exactly cancel out any measurable effect?
One could of course try guarantee the distance of mirrors using gravity instead of solid matter (i.e. a gravity orbit). But unfortunately gravity is assumed to propagate at the very same speed hence leading to the very same dependence on ##c## iff both forces are affected by an ether in identical fashion.
So at a native second glance it seems like the experiment might try to compare the directional properties of the speed of light with itself hence being unable to detect anything. How is that actually resolved in modern physics?
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