Unfounded speculation and wishful thinking on your part. Doesn't make it true, sorry.
That's not a problem. You see, in science, you get richly rewarded for "upsetting the status quo" as long as you have the evidence to back up your claims. The more controversial the claim, the higher the bar. Scientists know this, and are careful to clear the bar, instead of spending nights at a bar.The problem is how to report it, without making yourself the target of ridicule and upsetting the status quo.
problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back (Piet Hein)I cook with wine, and sometime I even add it to the food. (W.C. Fields)
I don't ask stupid questions. I just make stupid statements!!!
Experience is a wonderful thing. It enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.
All truths are simple to understand, once they are found. The challenge is finding them. (attrib. to Galileo)
I am on your side. There are two main objections against relativistic contractions:
- Mutual, full-valued point of view from subject and observer (a observer must have been shorted by the same way as explored subject)
- Very clear difference between the incoming and outgoing real, objective, subject’s influence at the explorer (in the first case the same signal act for a shorter time – this effect is inaccurately called “Doppler effect” )
Empty space without any metric base, without any countable “points”, elements, is too bizarre imagination. Yet empty (physical) space composed by uncountable number of real elements is even more bizarre…
Last edited by Cerveny; 2010-Mar-21 at 10:45 AM.
Cerveny, Please do not confuse the thread by introducing your own ATM idea.
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All Moderation in Purple
wisp,
I am hoping you can give me your opinion concerning my question in posting #87,
respectfully, forrest
Reg Cahill at Flinders has released an interesting paper on Gezari's results, see [URL="http://www.ptep-online.com/index_files/2010/PP-21-08.PDF"[/URL].
From the pdf:andRecently Gezari [22] has published some bouncetime* data, and performed an analysis of that data. The analysis and results herein are different from those in [22], as are the conclusions.
* Total travel time to moon and back.Heh, heh, he said bizarre...However a bizarre accident of date and timing occurred during these observations.
From the paper cited:
Herein we consider only these bounce times, and not the distance modellings, which are based on the assumption that the speed of light is invariant, and so at best are pseudo-ranges.
and:Bold mine.From the bounce times, alone, it is not possible to extract the anisotropy velocity vector, as the actual distance to the retroreflector is not known. To do that a detailed modelling of the moon orbit is required, but one in which the invariance of the light speed is not assumed.
This is what we've been saying. Gezari mistakenly uses distances calculated assuming the invariance of the speed of light to try to prove that light speed is variable.
I'm guessing that wisp has decided that we are correct and has abandoned his/her attempt to defend Gezari's paper.
problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back (Piet Hein)I cook with wine, and sometime I even add it to the food. (W.C. Fields)
I don't ask stupid questions. I just make stupid statements!!!
Experience is a wonderful thing. It enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.
All truths are simple to understand, once they are found. The challenge is finding them. (attrib. to Galileo)
I'm not sure I would use Cahill to refute Gezari. That's sorta like using David McGowan to refute Bart Sibrel. However, this paper does go into the the reason the conclusion of Gerazi's paper is in error (an error in the calculation of the frame of reference). He also mentions the distance was found using c as an invariant.
problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back (Piet Hein)I cook with wine, and sometime I even add it to the food. (W.C. Fields)
I don't ask stupid questions. I just make stupid statements!!!
Experience is a wonderful thing. It enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.
All truths are simple to understand, once they are found. The challenge is finding them. (attrib. to Galileo)
My quote from posting #87
http://www.ptep-online.com/index_fil...0/PP-21-08.PDF......... It (also) seems to me that the opposite effect could be seen from the Earth when it is rotating away from the moon if the reported results were valid. Can you think of any reason why a lunar laser shoot regarding the Earth's rotation away from the direction of the moon would not also be possible? The additional observation of the opposite effect would certainly seem like corroborative evidence in support of an aether making the exact distance to the moon seemingly less important.
In light of the above paper as well as the original paper by Gezari
http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0912/0912.3934.pdf
It would seem that one of the problems concerning the purported effect is in regard to the proof of the exact distance to the moon or the closing speed between the Earth and moon at the time of the testing/ shoot as well as changes as noted in the link by Tensor.
http://arxiv4.library.cornell.edu/PS...002.3968v1.pdf
It also would seem that on the opposite side of the Earth the same test could be performed, precisely 1/2 of a sidereal day of rotation later which accordingly should result in a subtractive effect (i.e. less than the conventional speed of light if the original results are valid). If so the exact distance to the moon or closing speed would seem less important and could be subtracted out of the results. Also if a close to simultaneous shoot (or one sidereal day later) could be done at a higher latitude the rotation effect should also accordingly be less.
Does anybody have any idea why such confirmation testing might be too difficult or also inconclusive?
Last edited by forrest noble; 2010-Mar-28 at 08:08 PM.
problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back (Piet Hein)I cook with wine, and sometime I even add it to the food. (W.C. Fields)
I don't ask stupid questions. I just make stupid statements!!!
Experience is a wonderful thing. It enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.
All truths are simple to understand, once they are found. The challenge is finding them. (attrib. to Galileo)
Nicely put :-)
And Gezari gets shown the door.However, this paper does go into the the reason the conclusion of Gerazi's paper is in error (an error in the calculation of the frame of reference). He also mentions the distance was found using c as an invariant.
I can't tell you why it might be too difficult or inconclusive. What I can tell you is why it's not needed. When APO is shooting the beam, it's not just doing it for twenty minutes and then stopping. It shoots ALL night.
Granted, the timing (hence the distance )will change throughout the night as the Earth-Moon distance changes, the rotation of the Earth brings the moon closer (it's farther away near the horizon), etc. But it should, and so far does, change in a predictable manner. Ya think that big of a difference, causing an unpredictable change, would have been noticed by now?
After all, all the observations go into the calculations for the Earth-Moon distance. Since they have it down to mm sized errors, anything that big ( +-200 mps) would cause a big change in the error bars. Something that hasn't been seen.
It's also quite interesting to see the list of effects that have to be modelled to get mm accuracy, and the amount of work that's been done to ensure that these effects are addressed in a robust, independent manner.
forrest noble, I echo Tensor's suggestion: take some time - quite a lot of time - to learn the details of this long-running LLR experiment.
HUb' check your PMs