- #36
NSD 09997
- 9
- 0
Sorry, I actually skipped that... and at times I really speak weird! Apology...ghwellsjr said:If you want to measure the speed of light without regard to the Theory of Special Relativity, you don't worry about a frame of reference. You just set an experiment which measures the round trip speed of light. This takes at least two photons. One going from you to a reflector and one coming back from the reflector to you. But since you will have no way of knowing when the first photon started out, or how much delay there was for the first photon to trigger the second photon, or how to know that the photon you sent out is the one that hit the reflector, it is not possible to measure even the round trip speed of a pair of photons. Nobody ever did that and nobody would ever try to do that. Instead, we use bright flashes of light which are easy to detect and we use long distances so that we can increase our accuracy.
The Theory of Special Relativity is where a frame of reference is defined and where the one-way speed of light (which includes photons) is defined to be c in all directions within anyone frame of reference you arbitrarily choose. Everything is in that one frame of reference, no matter where it is or how fast it is moving or accelerating. All light, including photons travel at c, by definition in that one frame of reference. If you want to consider a second frame of reference, you need to use the Lorentz Transform to convert all your time, location coordinates from your first FoR to your second FoR. That's what SR is all about.
You are picking out phrases that you don't understand and talking absolute nonsense. You need to learn what the these terms mean before you can ask meaningful questions.
I explained a lot of this in post #7. Please read and study that post. It has lots of answers for you.
But I'm reading it right now...