Path: csiph.com!au2pb.net!feeder.erje.net!1.eu.feeder.erje.net!news-1.dfn.de!news.dfn.de!news.informatik.hu-berlin.de!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: Thomas Heger Newsgroups: sci.physics.relativity Subject: Re: Interferometry Does Not Measure Light Speed. Date: Sun, 09 Aug 2015 18:31:26 +0200 Lines: 32 Message-ID: References: <49b20d29-e02d-4bfd-a82c-148a78361bd0@googlegroups.com> <3fabcfd6-c787-4a3a-a7f8-622fae9c4f9d@googlegroups.com> <66be9db3-7d68-4508-af7c-7217af447e58@googlegroups.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Trace: individual.net 67XsVlJVQL+qq2kcJ9piswbZU1kPX6Qgb5j8M2sfenVFrLZcr7 Cancel-Lock: sha1:6kjFXqUo99ytgQsAS8tBakAOEoU= User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1; rv:8.0) Gecko/20111105 Thunderbird/8.0 In-Reply-To: <66be9db3-7d68-4508-af7c-7217af447e58@googlegroups.com> Xref: csiph.com sci.physics.relativity:360119 Am 09.08.2015 17:19, schrieb rotchm: >> Now you apparently demand from me, that I should express my thoughts a >> little clearer and leave out irrelevant details. > > Yes, thats what *I* want. I want the concept, not the engendering details. > My point will be that, conceptually, your setup is a TWLS setup ( as per my definition of TWLS that I specified at the beginning of our discussion). now I have a problem with your statement. Where exactly do you see the second path of that laser beam? I would say, the laser is sent out at on side of the apparatus and measured at the other side. This is only one way - in my personal counting. >> I had the idea of a mechanical 'add function' in the form of a laser, >> that is subsequently projected on the rim of two coupled spinning >> wheels. This is technically an add function of the modulation, since the >> modulation on wheel A adds to the modulation caused by wheel B. > > If you have light bouncing back and forth, then the setup is not a OWLS. Yes, maybe, but that is not the case. In fact a part of the path is inside some kind of optics, with a prism and a few lenses. But this optic could be quite small. TH