Light Drag Effect of Vacuum Tube Versus Light Propagation in Stationary Vacuum Tube with Moving Source and Receiver
We presented a new way to examine the principle of relativity of Special Relativity. According to the principle of relativity, the light dragging by moving media and the light propagation in stationary media with moving source and receiver should be two totally equivalent phenomena. We select a vacu...
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Zusammenfassung: | We presented a new way to examine the principle of relativity of Special
Relativity. According to the principle of relativity, the light dragging by
moving media and the light propagation in stationary media with moving source
and receiver should be two totally equivalent phenomena. We select a vacuum
tube with two glass rods at two ends as the optical media. The length of the
middle vacuum cell is L and the thicknesses of the glass rods with refractive
index n are D1 and D2. The light drag effect of the moving vacuum tube with
speed v is a first-order effect, delta t = 2(n-1)(D1+D2)v/c^2, which is
independent of L because vacuum does not perform a drag effect. Predicted by
the principle of relativity, the change of the light propagation time interval
with stationary vacuum tube and moving source and receiver must be the same,
i.e., delta tao = delta t = 2(n-1)(D1+D2)v/c^2. However all analyses have shown
that the change of the propagation time interval delta tao is caused by the
motion of the receiver during the light propagation in the vacuum tube. Thus,
the contribution of the glass rods in delta tao is 2n(D1+D2)v/c^2, not
2(n-1)(D1+D2)v/c^2 in delta t. Importantly, the contribution of the vacuum cell
in delta tao is 2Lv/c^2, not zero in delta t. Our analyses are solid in optics.
The genuine tests of the prediction of the principle of relativity can be
conducted by the experiments with two atomic clocks, or the experiments with
fiber Sagnac interferometers. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1605.07703 |