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Albertgauss
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- TL;DR Summary
- I have some questions on the details of the relative velocities of the light beams in the ether.
Hi all,
I’m having a little trouble understanding the Michelson Morley experiment. Questions below.
I understand that the light beams in the interferometer were expected to somehow pick up differences in the speed of light when one beam traveled parallel to the direction of motion and the other beam traveled perpendicular to the direction of motion. I also understand how different light speeds would produce the different fringes.
In a popular analogy, there is the land, water moving at the speed “u”, and a raft on the water. The swimmers parallel and perpendicular to the raft represent the light beams. The raft represents the earth--- the vessel in which the lab is----moving through the ether. The water represents the ether current or “ether wind”. I do not know what the land represents, though. If the ether is everywhere, would it not simply be the same as the land?
First, just to make sure the Earth is the “raft” here, the vessel, through which we move through the ether. Michelson’s lab, being on the earth, is the vessel that moves through the ether, is this correct? If there is any change in speed of light to be detected, that change will come about because of the Earth velocity in the ether, is this correct? That is, when we write terms like , the “v” is the velocity of the earth.
In Michelson’s frame, the lab, he’s going to shine both light beams at the speed of light relative to him. I feel like if I am on the raft and I shine a flashlight in either direction, perpendicular or parallel, I would say the speed of that light is the usual “c” in my raft frame. If the speed of light changed due to the presence of the ether, I feel like I would have to be on the ground frame to find it, the land, where I might say that the parallel beam would have a lightspeed of in the direction of motion and on the return trip of the parallel beam back to the lab. Of course, Michelson can’t leave the Earth for some absolute rest frame in space. Yet, somehow, Michelson would have been able to measure the relative velocities of the speed of light on the raft, had they existed. I don’t understand this.
Also, once you’ve explained how the Michelson experiment failed to find the ether, next line of logic is Einstein’s two postulates about the laws of physics the same in all frames and the constancy of the speed of light in all frames. I understand how Einstein reinterpreted the speed of light as a physics law--- no different than electricity, optics, etc.--- that the speed of light should not change depending on the frame you’re in.
I attached a jpeg of how I am trying to imagine the whole picture of this experiment.
https://www.physicsforums.com/attachments/268819But why was it necessary to say that “the laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames”? What physics law were people saying in the ether experiment that wasn’t the same in all frames? It seems perfectly obvious to me that the laws of physics should not change depending if you move in an airplane, car, or go for a walk, so I am missing the profoundness of this statement after the ether experiment.
I’m having a little trouble understanding the Michelson Morley experiment. Questions below.
I understand that the light beams in the interferometer were expected to somehow pick up differences in the speed of light when one beam traveled parallel to the direction of motion and the other beam traveled perpendicular to the direction of motion. I also understand how different light speeds would produce the different fringes.
In a popular analogy, there is the land, water moving at the speed “u”, and a raft on the water. The swimmers parallel and perpendicular to the raft represent the light beams. The raft represents the earth--- the vessel in which the lab is----moving through the ether. The water represents the ether current or “ether wind”. I do not know what the land represents, though. If the ether is everywhere, would it not simply be the same as the land?
First, just to make sure the Earth is the “raft” here, the vessel, through which we move through the ether. Michelson’s lab, being on the earth, is the vessel that moves through the ether, is this correct? If there is any change in speed of light to be detected, that change will come about because of the Earth velocity in the ether, is this correct? That is, when we write terms like , the “v” is the velocity of the earth.
In Michelson’s frame, the lab, he’s going to shine both light beams at the speed of light relative to him. I feel like if I am on the raft and I shine a flashlight in either direction, perpendicular or parallel, I would say the speed of that light is the usual “c” in my raft frame. If the speed of light changed due to the presence of the ether, I feel like I would have to be on the ground frame to find it, the land, where I might say that the parallel beam would have a lightspeed of in the direction of motion and on the return trip of the parallel beam back to the lab. Of course, Michelson can’t leave the Earth for some absolute rest frame in space. Yet, somehow, Michelson would have been able to measure the relative velocities of the speed of light on the raft, had they existed. I don’t understand this.
Also, once you’ve explained how the Michelson experiment failed to find the ether, next line of logic is Einstein’s two postulates about the laws of physics the same in all frames and the constancy of the speed of light in all frames. I understand how Einstein reinterpreted the speed of light as a physics law--- no different than electricity, optics, etc.--- that the speed of light should not change depending on the frame you’re in.
I attached a jpeg of how I am trying to imagine the whole picture of this experiment.
https://www.physicsforums.com/attachments/268819But why was it necessary to say that “the laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames”? What physics law were people saying in the ether experiment that wasn’t the same in all frames? It seems perfectly obvious to me that the laws of physics should not change depending if you move in an airplane, car, or go for a walk, so I am missing the profoundness of this statement after the ether experiment.