Here is how to best define your mental condition jack.
Your derivation reaches a figure of 1/365.
Dr. C.C. Su arrives at a figure of 10,000.
His paper is published in peer reviewed journals, who could have reminded him of the quote from Post's article. They did not.
You are off by a scale of 3,650,000.
But this is no problem to you.
Is this not a sign of sure idiocy?
For your information, the Harvard ads abstract service only published MAJOR ASTRONOMY AND PHYSICS PUBLICATIONS.
Not garbage like your derivation.
Published in Physics Letters A, a journal primarily for letters rather than strong journal articles.
It has an impact factor of 1.8, making it quite low.Physical Review Letters (PRL), established in 1958, is a peer-reviewed, scientific journal that is published 52 times per year by the American Physical Society. As also confirmed by various measurement standards, which include the Journal Citation Reports impact factor and the journal h-index proposed by Google Scholar, many physicists and other scientists consider Physical Review Letters
one of the most prestigious journals in the field of physics.Are we to understand that you jack have such a low degree of ignorance as to try to minimize the PRL journal?
Dr. Su's paper was also published by the Bulletin of the American Physical Society.
The American Physical Society (APS) is the world's second largest organization of physicists. The Society publishes more than a dozen scientific journals, including the prestigious Physical Review and Physical Review Letters, and organizes more than twenty science meetings each year. APS is a member society of the American Institute of Physics.
Dr. Su's paper was also published by the Journal of Electromagnetic Waves and Applications, also a highly respected scientific journal.
His paper was published by the IOP journals.
Journal of Electromagnetic Waves and Applications:
http://www.ee.nthu.edu.tw/ccsu/qem/f3c.pdfFor the interplanetary propagation, earth’s orbital
motion contributes to the Sagnac effect as well. This local-ether model
has been adopted to account for the Sagnac effect due to earth’s
motions in a wide variety of propagation phenomena, particularly the
global positioning system (GPS), the intercontinental microwave link,
and the interplanetary radar.
The peer reviewers at the Journal of Electromagnetic Waves and Applications agree that the orbital Sagnac is larger than the rotational Sagnac, that it is missing, and that a local-ether model has to be adopted in order to account for this fact.
If the orbital Sagnac was really insignificant, the peer reviewers would not have accepted the paper to be published.
Because it is not insignificant, in fact larger than the rotational Sagnac, a local aether has to be adopted, contrary to your assertion.
Go ahead and mail your piece of shit derivation and you will see how you will be laughed at.
derive the calculation of the Sagnac effect (i.e. the phase shift between 2 counterpropagating beams of light around a loop), and show that the orbital Sagnac is much greater,
This is exactly what I have done.
The calculations for the rotational Sagnac.
The speed of light is:
c = 299,792 km/s
The circumference of the earth at the equator is:
C = 40,075 km
The duration of one day is:
d = 24 hr = 1440 min = 86400 sec
So now we can calculate the instantaneous tangential velocity of the earth at the equator to be:
v = (C / d) = 40,075 km / 86400 sec = 0.4638310185 km/sec
And we can calculate the amount of time it would take light to travel once around a non-rotating circumference:
t = (C / c) = 40,075 km / 299,792.458 km/s = 0.1336758111s
But, in the heliocentric hypothesis, the earth circumference is rotating, so there are actually going to be two different times in two different directions:
t1 = (C / (c - v)) = 40,075 km / (299,792.458 - 0.4638310185) km/s = 0.1336760179s
t2 = (C / (c + v)) = 40,075 km / (299,792.458 + 0.4638310185) km/s = 0.1336756043s
The difference between the above times is:
(t - t1) = 0.1336758111s - 0.1336760179s = -.0000002068s = -207 nanoseconds
(t - t2) = 0.1336758111s - 0.1336756043s = +.0000002068s = +207 nanoseconds
This is the well known figure of 207 nanoseconds accepted by the scientific community around the world.
The calculations for the orbital Sagnac:
The speed of light is:
c = 299,792.458 km/s
The circumference of the earth orbit:
O = 939,951,145 km
The duration of one year is:
Y = d*(365.25) = 86400*(365.25) = 31,557,600s
So now we can calculate the instantaneous tangential velocity of the earth orbit to be:
V = (O / Y) = 939,951,145 km / 31,557,600s = 29.785254 km/s
And we can calculate the amount of time it would take light to travel once around a non-rotating circumference:
T = (O / c) = 939,951,145 km / 299,792.458 km/s = 3135.339532s
But, under the heliocentric hypothesis, the earth orbit is revolving around the sun, so there are actually going to be two different times in two different directions:
T1 = (O / (c - V)) = 939,951,145 km / (299,792.458 - 29.785254) km/s = 3135.651068s
T2 = (O / (c + V)) = 939,951,145 km / (299,792.458 + 29.785254) km/s = 3135.028057s
The difference between the above times is:
(T - T1) = 3135.339532s - 3135.651068s = -0.311536 seconds
(T - T2) = 3135.339532s - 3135.028057s = +0.311536 seconds
The percentage of orbital path that the earth occupies at any given time:
P = (C / (2πO)) = 40,075 km / (6.283185307)(939,951,145 km) = .0006785601973%
Correcting the time differences for the above percentage:
(-.311536s)(.0006785601973%) = -.000002113959296s = -2,114 nanoseconds
(+.311536s)(.0006785601973%) = +.000002113959296s = +2,114 nanoseconds
The rotational and the orbital Sagnac can be compared immediately:
Earth's radius = 6357 km; r² = 40411449
Earth's orbital radius = 150,000,000 km r² = 22500000000000000
∆t = 4πR²ω/(c²-v²)
or
I use the linear velocity.
∆t = 4πRv/( c² - v² ), where v is the linear velocity.
For the earth's rotation, it is 0.4638333 km/ sec and the orbit v = 30km/sec.
∆t = 0.62831852628 for the earth's orbit.
Total path of the orbit is 2πr=2π(150,000,000 km) = 942,477,780km
Hence, the sagnac effect for a 1 km path, that means light source in the center and two receivers placed at .5km is:
0.62831852628 / 942,477,780km = 6.6666667 e-10 sec / km
Now, for the earth's rotation.
∆t = 4.1170061 e-7 seconds
Total path of the rotation is 2πr=2π(6357 km) = 39942.21 km
4.1170061 e-7 seconds / 39942.21 km = 1.0307407 e-11 sec / km
The sagnac effect for the earth's orbit is greater than that of the rotation.
I provided a quote from it, where it clearly indicates uniformly moving fibre doesn't produce a phase shift.
You are confusing FOG with FOC.
The authors explained in detail how the phase shift is obtained.
As shown in Fig. 3, the phase shift or the traveltime
difference between two counter-propagating light
beams in the moving optic fiber was clearly observed
in all different configurations of FOCs. The phase shift
Δφ, and therefore, the travel-time difference Δt are
proportional to both the total length and the speed of
the moving fiber whether the motion is circular or
uniform.
So this uniform motion did not produce a phase shift. As such, there is more to it than simple translational motion.The authors explained:
The FOG travelled with the mechanical conveyor and its uniform motion did not cause any phase shift because the FOG is only sensitive to the rotational movement.
The experiment was repeated with 24 different
arrangements of conveyor speeds, fiber lengths, and the
three different FOC configurations shown in Fig.1.
The conveyor speeds were between 3 and 9 cm/s. The
loops had perimeters of 2.5, 4.0, 8.0, and 16.0 m; in
each case there were three turns of the fiber wound on
the loop.
As shown in Fig. 3, the phase shift or the traveltime
difference between two counter-propagating light
beams in the moving optic fiber was clearly observed
in all different configurations of FOCs. The phase shift
Δφ, and therefore, the travel-time difference Δt are
proportional to both the total length and the speed of
the moving fiber whether the motion is circular or
uniform. Other tests using smaller end wheels for the
FOC and fiber loops with additional curves also
confirmed the same finding.
Professor Wang's seminal did prove that the Sagnac applied to linear motion.
If you don't, you will not correctly calculate the fringe shift.But you do get the correct fringe shift using the correct calculation.
Try to imagine the center of the earth as the sun and the earth's orbit as the surface. So, the earth is in a rotational/circular pattern in its orbit. Just like the rotational sagnac, the earth rotates toward where the satellite emitted the signal, and with the orbit, the earth, the unit is orbited toward where the signal was emitted.
Then we simply apply the well-known formula to this situation, where R = 150,000,000 km, v = wR (=30km/s).
What jack has done is to use the wrong radius for the orbital sagnac and then claim the distance to the sun is the same as the radius of the earth and he comes up with a sagnac based only on angular velocity.
But the sagnac is a function of the product of the area swept out by the path and the angular velocity. That path is based on the distance from the center of rotation to the path.
This correct calculation is supported by mainstream papers.
Which are peer reviewed.
The v of the moving frame is what matters in the calculations for the sagnac effect.
And v = 30km/s in the heliocentric hypothesis.
The radius for such a speed is 150,000,000.
Your conclusion leads to this figure: 1/365.
The papers published by Dr. Su in more than five journals, which are peer reviewed, lead to this figure: 10,000.
What does the fact that you are off by a factor 3,650,000 tell you jack?
Δto/Δt r=[4Aiωo/( c² - vo²)] / [4Aiωr/( c² - vr²)]
Note, the area here has nothing to do with the area of Earth's orbit or radius of it or the radius of Earth. It is the area of the interferometer, as my derivation.
No where in any derivation did the area of Earth's orbit come into it.
So to continue:
Δto/Δt r=[4Aiωo/( c² - vo²)] / [4Aiωr/( c² - vr²)]
Obviously, ( c² - vo²) and ( c² - vr²) are very close to the same number, so let's lave them off.
=4Aiωo/ 4Aiωr
Then to simplify:
=ωo/ ωr
And would you look at that? It ends up being just like what we claim.
You have ωo/ ωr.
As Earth rotates roughly 365 times for each orbit, ωr=365*ωo.
Thus we get:
Δto/Δt r=ωo/ ωr
=ωo/ (365*ωo)
=1/365
You are not using the correct Sagnac formula jack.
If light travels at one speed c, then as the earth supposedly moves in it's revolution loop at 30k/s, while light moves c through space, the unit at the equator at noon would move with the earth' rotation and the earth's revolution cutting the distance the signal must travel to meet the unit.
"Let's say the unit is at the equator and the satellite is low on the horizon in the east at noon.
That means the unit is traveling at the orbital speed of the earth at 67,000 MPH.
The satellite emits at one speed c in space. While the light travels through space toward the unit at c, the unit moves with the earth at 67,000 MPH. The unit cuts the distance that the light must travel.
This is not being seen by any experiements nor GPS."
Yet, this same logic applies and works with the earth's supposed rotation.
Please read again.
Try to imagine the center of the earth as the sun and the earth's orbit as the surface. So, the earth is in a rotational/circular pattern in its orbit. Just like the rotational sagnac, the earth rotates toward where the satellite emitted the signal, and with the orbit, the earth, the unit is orbited toward where the signal was emitted.
Then we simply apply the well-known formula to this situation, where R = 150,000,000 km, v = wR (=30km/s).
But that is not what you did.
Rotational Sagnac, r = x
ORBITAL SAGNAC, R = x
They are the same.This is madness.
r = 6,378 km
R = 150,000,000 km
How can they be the same?
If you have beam a and beam b, where they are counterpropogating, Exactly.
Here is the correct calculation for you.
The calculations for the orbital Sagnac:
The speed of light is:
c = 299,792.458 km/s
The circumference of the earth orbit:
O = 939,951,145 km
The duration of one year is:
Y = d*(365.25) = 86400*(365.25) = 31,557,600s
So now we can calculate the instantaneous tangential velocity of the earth orbit to be:
V = (O / Y) = 939,951,145 km / 31,557,600s = 29.785254 km/s
And we can calculate the amount of time it would take light to travel once around a non-rotating circumference:
T = (O / c) = 939,951,145 km / 299,792.458 km/s = 3135.339532s
But, under the heliocentric hypothesis, the earth orbit is revolving around the sun, so there are actually going to be two different times in two different directions:
T1 = (O / (c - V)) = 939,951,145 km / (299,792.458 - 29.785254) km/s = 3135.651068s
T2 = (O / (c + V)) = 939,951,145 km / (299,792.458 + 29.785254) km/s = 3135.028057s
The difference between the above times is:
(T - T1) = 3135.339532s - 3135.651068s = -0.311536 seconds
(T - T2) = 3135.339532s - 3135.028057s = +0.311536 seconds
The percentage of orbital path that the earth occupies at any given time:
P = (C / (2πO)) = 40,075 km / (6.283185307)(939,951,145 km) = .0006785601973%
Correcting the time differences for the above percentage:
(-.311536s)(.0006785601973%) = -.000002113959296s = -2,114 nanoseconds
(+.311536s)(.0006785601973%) = +.000002113959296s = +2,114 nanoseconds
This means the path length for b is much shorter, and thus the shift (measured as extra time taken for beam a relative to beam b) will be positive.COMPLETELY WRONG!
Dr. A.G. Kelly explains:

The shift IS DUE TO THE DIFFERENT SPEEDS RECORDED, AND NOT DUE TO THE DISTANCE.
This is where you went completely wrong.
As such your derivation is a piece of shit.
You get a shift because of the different speeds recorded, c + v and c - v.
The difference in time (dt) for the light to traverse the path, in opposite directions, was derived by Sagnac as:
dt = 4Aw/c^2
where A is the area enclosed by the light path,
wRadians per second is the angular velocity of spin and c the speed of light. By reversing the direction of the spin of the disc, he got double the amount, and this made the result more detectable.
If you do not know how the Sagnac is derived please study:
http://www.naturalphilosophy.org/pdf/ebooks/Kelly-TimeandtheSpeedofLight.pdfSo that is where you went wrong.
This means the path length for b is much shorter, and thus the shift (measured as extra time taken for beam a relative to beam b) will be positive.I explained why you MUST subtract the 2 values.
If you have beam a and beam b, where they are counterpropogating, then in the arc with radius R2, say beam a is moving forwards and beam b is moving backwards (relative to the orbital motion).
This means the path length for b is much shorter, and thus the shift (measured as extra time taken for beam a relative to beam b) will be positive.
The shift is due to the DIFFERENT SPEEDS RECORDED, C + V AND C - V, AND NOT DUE TO THE LENGTHS.
You have just shown jack, your utter ignorance of the physics behind the Sagnac effect.
No wonder you were off by a scale of 3,650,000.