Here is how to best define your mental condition jack.
Your derivation reaches a figure of 1/365.
Yes, and until you show a problem with that derivation, it stands correct.
Now stop with your BS appeals to authority and deal with the derivation.
Is this not a sign of sure idiocy?
Yes, it is a sure sign of your idiocy, that you are unable to point out a flaw with my derivation, which clearly means the 1/365 figure is correct, yet you go on acting like it is wrong.
A sure sign of your idiocy.
For your information, the Harvard ads abstract service only published MAJOR ASTRONOMY AND PHYSICS PUBLICATIONS.
They don't publish. The collate abstracts, nothing more.
If a paper is published in a journal they collate the abstracts for, it will appear there.
Not garbage like your derivation.
You mean my completely correct derivation?
If so, no, they wont put that there, because it is nothing noteworthy as it is already well established by others (like post) that the Sagnac effect is dependent upon the area of the loop, not the distance from the centre of the orbit.
But don't worry, they do have some of the papers I have published.
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.
Are we to understand that you jack have such a low degree of ignorance as to try to minimize the PRL journal?
Yes, I have such a low degree of ignorance that I understand that it's impact factor is quite low, making it not a very good journal.
And no acknowledgement that you were completely wrong about where it was published?
I'm done with your ignorance regarding the academic publishing world.
Deal with the derivation or shut up.
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.
No it isn't. You have repeatedly ignored the requirement that there exists a loop with 2 counterpropagating beams of light.
The closest you have come is a hypothetical case where the sagnac loop is the entire orbit or entire planet.
But then you use 2 different loops.
The calculations for the rotational Sagnac.
And we can calculate the amount of time it would take light to travel once around a non-rotating circumference:
Do it for a small interferometer on the surface of Earth, not one which is the entire planet.
The calculations for the orbital Sagnac:
And we can calculate the amount of time it would take light to travel once around a non-rotating circumference:
And now you make your comparison meaningless by comparing 2 completely different loops.
Do it for the same loop as you had for Earth.
If you don't, then you are showing the Sagnac effect for Earth's orbit in one system, is larger than the Sagnac effect for Earth's rotation in another system.
We can continue dishonest comparisons like this.
Lets assume a hypothetical interferometer with a radius of 1 000 000 000 km, rotating with Earth, now, this 1 light year centred on Earth has a shift given by dt=4Aw/c^2, where A=pi*r^2.
So this gives dt=4 000 000 000 000 000 000*pi km^2*(1/86400 s)/90 000 000 000 (km/s)^2 = 4 000 000 *pi*(1/864*9) s = 1616 s.
But you only got 2 us for your orbit. So it looks like Earth's rotational Sagnac effect is much larger than its orbital one.
See what happens when you use 2 different loops?
The comparison is meaningless.
Now show the derivation FOR THE SAME LOOP!!!!!!
Until you do, your comparison is meaningless.
The rotational and the orbital Sagnac can be compared immediately:
That's right. For a given loop, A=A.
For the rotation we have wr, for the orbit we have wo.
∆t=4*A*w/c^2
Thus ∆to=4A*wo/c^2
and ∆tr=4A*wr/c^2.
Comparing the 2:
∆to/∆tr=(4A*wo/c^2)/(4A*wr/c^2)=wo/wr.
Thus it is quite simple to see that the orbital Sagnac is much less than the rotational one due to the much lower angular velocity.
Once again, if you use different loops, your comparison is meaningless.
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.
No. I'm not confusing anything. All a FOG is, is an optic fibre with 2 counter propagating beams of light, where this optic fibre is a loop, which when rotated results in a phase shift.
A FOC basically the same, except instead of rotation, you can pull the fibre along a loop and have the same result. You still need some form of loop, and it is the fibres non-uniform motion around this loop that results in the phase shift.
The author is clearly stating that uniform motion itself does not produce a phase shift. Instead it is something else which does it.
So this uniform motion did not produce a phase shift. As such, there is more to it than simple translational motion.
The authors explained:
Stop just quote mining the author. I have shown the problem with that.
Explain it yourself, or shut up.
The uniform motion did not produce a phase shift.
It was only in the loop of the fibre with non-uniform motion that produced a phase shift.
Professor Wang's seminal did prove that the Sagnac applied to linear motion.
No. Not linear motion. A loop. It is impossible for linear motion to be a loop.
If you don't, you will not correctly calculate the fringe shift.
But you do get the correct fringe shift using the correct calculation.
Yes, as I did, showing the orbital Sagnac is much smaller than the rotational one.
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.
STOP JUST REPEATING THE SAME REFUTED CRAP!!!!!!
I already explained the issue. That would require the satellite to be orbiting the sun at a velocity significantly different to Earth.
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:
Explains nothing related to that specific issue.
Explain what is wrong with it or shut up.
The shift IS DUE TO THE DIFFERENT SPEEDS RECORDED, AND NOT DUE TO THE DISTANCE.
Only in a non-inertial reference frame, which is not the frame being used.
It requires the loop to be stationary (not rotating), and then the distortion due to the non-inertial reference frame results in an anisotropy of the speed of light resulting in a fringe shift.
In a non-inertial reference frame, the loop rotates (and can translate). As such, this results in a change in distance, while the speed of light remains constant.
The difference in time is due to the different distances.
So no, I am still completely correct.
If you do not know how the Sagnac is derived please study:
I do know how, and I have shown how. You are yet to show a single error.
http://www.naturalphilosophy.org/pdf/ebooks/Kelly-TimeandtheSpeedofLight.pdf
And this still agrees with me. It states A is the area enclosed by the light path. No mention of the orbital distance.
So yet another of your sources indicates you are full of shit.
So once again, my derivation remains unrefuted.
You are embarrassing yourself.
Again, you cannot read.
We've been through this before.
Yes we have. You got completely destroyed with your claims shown to be pure garbage.
10,000 is not the same as 1/365, is it now?
That's right. All derivations of the Sagnac effect show the shift to be proportional to the area of the loop and angular velocity.
As such, for a given loop, the orbital Sagnac is much smaller than the rotational one.
As such, anyone claiming 10 000 rather than 1/365 is full of shit.
In fact jackblack never disclosed at all HOW he arrived at his calculations, the actual methodology.
Yes I did, right from the start, from the very first time we started discussing this and I presented my derivation. It was all there and you were unable to show a single thing wrong with it.
The fact that he used the same area and the same radius for two different Sagnac effects
Not the same radius, just the same area, as that way it is an honest comparison of the 2 effects on a given system.
thus was off by a scale of 3,650,000 was just a consequence.
Nope. I am correct. You are yet to show anything wrong with the derivation, so your claims of me being off is pure garbage.
Having been forced to explain WHY he substracted the two values, finally jack revealed what he so shrewdly was hiding from the view of his readers:
Again, I explained that right from the start.
You can also do it without subtracting the 2 values and instead adding the 2 values for the time taken by each beam and then subtracting them.
Once again, you are unable to show any problem.
And you actually had the audacity to challenge me with this piece of shit?
No. I have the audacity to challenge you with this irrefutable derivation, which you have been unable to show any issue with.
Dr. A.G. Kelly explains:
The Shift is proportional to the area enclosed by the light path, and thus the distance from the centre of rotation is irrelevant.
As such, Dr Kelly agrees with me that the correct formula is:
dt=4*A*w/c^2.
This means the orbital Sagnac (with a much smaller w) is much smaller than the rotational Sagnac.
Basic theory of the Sagnac effect:
No, new attempt at an interpretation.
But I do see you discarding all your old sources to try and come up with an excuse.
Feel free to provide the derivation for the loop in question (not your garbage ones), for both the rotation and orbit, using this methodology. I might get around to it later.
Sagnac means you have different SPEEDS, and not different lengths for the paths.
Only in a non-inertial reference frame.
The earliest derivations of the Sagnac effect used different lengths, not different speeds.
For a simple case of a rotating loop, one light beam has to rotate all the way around the loop, and then a little bit more to reach the source/detector.
The other one has to rotate a little bit less.
This derivation works without appealing to an anisotropy of the speed of light due to a non-inertial reference frame.
The paths must be the same.
No. As the loop is moving the paths CANNOT be the same.
“In his final essay on the subject in 1937, Langevin proposed
Yes, proposed, not proved.
So once again, my derivation remains correct and unrefuted and you are yet to provide your own derivation for the system in question.