You do not have the necessary mathematical understanding to quote from Zendri's paper.
Do you understand the significance of a power series expansion?
The main term is the Coriolis effect formula.
The next term is O(wr/c)
2.
Do you understand the meaning of the symbol O()?
The relativistic correction is MUCH SMALLER IN MAGNITUDE THAN THE MAIN TERM.
What you have just done, here in front of all of the readers, is to prove that your messages belong to the complete nonsense section.
You do not even understand the meaning of the symbol O().
There is no such thing as general relativity:
https://www.theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=30499.msg769750#msg769750 (total demolition of STR/GTR)
The most extraordinary proofs on HOW EINSTEIN FAKED HIS 1919/1922 DATA FOR THE SO CALLED EINSTEIN SHIFT:
http://einstein52.tripod.com/alberteinsteinprophetorplagiarist/id9.htmlhttp://www.ekkehard-friebe.de/dishones.htm (scroll down to the section: With regard to the politics that led to Einstein's fame Dr. S. Chandrasekhar's article [46] states...)
http://web.archive.org/web/20070202201854/http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles/einstein.htmlDr. F. Schmeidler of the Munich University Observatory has published a paper titled "The Einstein Shift An Unsettled Problem," and a plot of shifts for 92 stars for the 1922 eclipse shows shifts going in all directions, many of them going the wrong way by as large a deflection as those shifted in the predicted direction! Further examination of the 1919 and 1922 data originally interpreted as confirming relativity, tended to favor a larger shift, the results depended very strongly on the manner for reducing the measurements and the effect of omitting individual stars.
Moreover, Einstein made a terrible blunder.
Einstein, 1905:
"The principle of the constancy of the velocity of light is of course contained in Maxwell's equations”
Here are the censored Heaviside-Lorentz equations, USED BY EINSTEIN to justify his erronous claim regarding the speed of light:

However, the original set of dynamical Maxwell equations are invariant under Galilean transformations, a variable speed of light:
https://www.theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=30499.msg2058884#msg2058884Silberstein's paper first quoted by me, here on this forum, is very clear.
The derivation of the Coriolis effect for light beams is undergraduate level.
Very easy to do.
Two papers which prove that the formula derived by Michelson is the Coriolis effect equation:
Full derivation of the above formula using the CORIOLIS FORCE:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/308921264_Spinning_Earth_and_its_Coriolis_effect_on_the_circuital_light_beams_Verification_of_the_special_relativity_theoryDr. Ludwik Silberstein derived the same formula in 1921:
https://www.theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=30499.msg2068289#msg2068289In 1921, Dr. Silberstein proposed that the Sagnac effect, as it relates to the rotation of the Earth or to the effect of the ether drift, must be explained in terms of the Coriolis effect: the direct action of Coriolis forces on counterpropagating waves.
http://www.conspiracyoflight.com/Michelson-Gale/Silberstein.pdfThe propagation of light in rotating systems, Journal of the Optical Society of America, vol. V, number 4, 1921
The quote you provided, pg 298 of the paper, has nothing to do with the Sagnac or the Coriolis effect.
Dr. Silberstein is deriving the equation of the light path in relation to Fermat's principle.
Did you even read the paper?
How then could make such a catastrophic blunder?
He starts the derivation of the Coriolis effect on page 298 at the bottom.
The fact that you CONFUSED and MIXED UP two different situations tells volumes about your miserable training as physicist.
Remember, the CORIOLIS EFFECT is a physical effect.
It relates directly to the area of the interferometer.
In 1922, Dr. Silberstein published a second paper on the subject, where he generalizes the nature of the rays arriving from the collimator:
http://gsjournal.net/Science-Journals/Historical%20Papers-Mechanics%20/%20Electrodynamics/Download/2645In 1924, one year before the Michelson-Gale experiment, Dr. Silberstein published a third paper, where he again explicitly links the Coriolis effect to the counterpropagating light beams in the interferometer:
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14786442408634503
Dr. Silberstein reveals the error committed by M. von Laue in the paper published in 1911:
"Laue seems, by the way, to be under the misapprehension that the light rays relative to the rotating table are straight lines, which they are not."
Dr. Silberstein proved that the effect measured by Sagnac is A PHYSICAL EFFECT, a deflection/inflection of the light beams due to the CORIOLIS FORCE.
Dr. Silberstein is describing the Coriolis effect, whether the lines are straight or not, NOT the electromagnetic effect (the Sagnac effect).
HERE IS THE PROOF THAT DR. SILBERSTEIN DERIVED THE CORIOLIS EFFECT:
One of the most in-depth treaties on the ring laser interferometers.
https://books.google.ro/books?id=8c_mBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA15&lpg=PA15&dq=malykin+silberstein+coriolis&source=bl&ots=JrMqF2vmto&sig=xCnMB4hL_J_ESg9Xdfhye1ahVjA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiE0ZDWxeXeAhXwkYsKHYxwBMYQ6AEwCXoECAUQAQ#v=onepage&q=malykin%20silberstein%20coriolis&f=falseCAN YOU READ ENGLISH RABINOZ?
Silberstein (798, 799) suggested an explanation for the Sagnac effect based on the direct consideration of the effect of the Coriolis force on the counterpropagating waves.Those two references, 798 and 799 are EXACTLY the ones I provided in my messages.
Make no mistake about it: Dr. Silberstein derives the Coriolis effect, which is directly related to the area of the interferometer.
Dr. Silberstein:
He uses the expression kω for the angular velocity, where k is the aether drag factor.
He proves that the formula for the Coriolis effect on the light beams is:
dt = 2ωσ/c^2
Then, Dr. Silberstein analyzes the area σ and proves that it is actually a SUM of two other areas (page 300 of the paper, page 10 of the pdf document).
The effect of the Coriolis force upon the interferometer will be to create a convex and a concave shape of the areas: σ1 and σ2.
The sum of these two areas is replaced by 2A and this is how the final formula achieves its final form:
dt = 4ωA/c^2
A = σ1 + σ2
That is, the CORIOLIS EFFECT upon the light beams is totally related to the closed contour area.
If yours is the correct expression for the Sagnac delay how is ot that none of the references support that result?What ?!

The most ingenious experiment performed by Professor Yeh: light from a laser is split into two separate fibers, F1 and F2 which are coiled such that light travels clockwise in F1 and counterclockwise in F2.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/26797550_Self-pumped_phase-conjugate_fiber-optic_gyroSelf-pumped phase-conjugate fiber-optic gyro, I. McMichael, P. Yeh, Optics Letters 11(10):686-8 · November 1986
http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a170203.pdf (appendix 5.1)
The first phase-conjugate Sagnac experiment on a segment light path with a self-pumped configuration.
The Sagnac phase shift for the first fiber F1:
+2πR
1L
1Ω/λc
The Sagnac phase shift for the second fiber F2:
-2πR
2L
2Ω/λc
These are two separate Sagnac effects, each valid for the two fibers, F1 and F2.
The use of the phase conjugate mirror permits the revealing of the final formula, the total phase difference:
φ = -2(φ
2 - φ
1) = 4π(R
1L
1 + R
2L
2)Ω/λc
2(v
1l
1 + v
2l
2)/c
2Exactly the formula obtained by Professor Yeh:
φ = -2(φ
2 - φ
1) = 4π(R
1L
1 + R
2L
2)Ω/λc = 4π(V
1L
1 + V
2L
2)/λc
Since Δφ = 2πc/λ x Δt, Δt = 2(R
1L
1 + R
2L
2)Ω/c
2 = 2(V
1L
1 + V
2L
2)/c
2CORRECT SAGNAC FORMULA:
2(V1L1 + V2L2)/c2http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-iarticle_query?1925ApJ....61..137M&data_type=PDF_HIGH&whole_paper=YES&type=PRINTER&filetype=.pdf
The promise made by A. Michelson, "the difference in time required for the two pencils to return to the starting point will be...", never materialized mathematically.
Instead of applying the correct definition of the Sagnac effect, Michelson compared TWO OPEN SEGMENTS/ARMS of the interferometer, and not the TWO LOOPS, as required by the exact meaning of the Sagnac experiment.
As such, his formula captured the Coriolis effect upon the light beams.
Not even the formal derivation of the Sagnac effect formula is not entirely correct.


This is the correct way to derive the Sagnac formula:
Sagnac phase component for the clockwise path:
2πR(1/(c - v))
Sagnac phase component for the counterclockwise path:
-2πR(1/(c + v))
The continuous clockwise loop has a positive sign +
The continuous counterclockwise loop has a negative sign -
The net phase difference will be (let us remember that the counterclockwise phase difference has a negative sign attached to it):
2πR(1/(c - v)) - (-){-2πR(1/(c + v))} = 2πR(1/(c - v)) - (+)2πR(1/(c + v)) = 2πR(1/(c - v)) - 2πR(1/(c + v)) = 2vL/c
2The definition of the Sagnac effect is applied to a closed loop (either circular or a uniform path).
Loop = a structure, series, or process, the end of which is connected to the beginning.
Thus, from a mathematical point of view, Michelson did not derive the Sagnac effect formula at all, since he compared two open segments, and not two loops.
Using the correct definition, we recover not only the error-free formula, but also the precise velocity addition terms.

Practically, A. Michelson received the Nobel prize (1907) for the wrong formula (published in 1904 and 1887; E.J. Post proved in 1999 that the Michelson-Morley interferometer is actually a Sagnac interferometer).
No other physicist has been able to derive the correct Sagnac formula: for the past 100 years they have been using the wrong formula (the Coriolis effect equation) to describe a very different physical situation.
Here, for the first time, the correct Sagnac formula for an interferometer located away from the center of rotation has been derived in a precise manner.

Point A is located at the detector
Point B is in the bottom right corner
Point C is in the upper right corner
Point D is in the upper left corner
l
1 is the upper arm.
l
2 is the lower arm.
Here is the most important part of the derivation of the full/global Sagnac effect for an interferometer located away from the center of rotation.
A > B > C > D > A is a continuous counterclockwise path, a negative sign -
A > D > C > B > A is a continuous clockwise path, a positive sign +
The Sagnac phase difference for the clockwise path has a positive sign.
The Sagnac phase difference for the counterclockwise has a negative sign.
Sagnac phase components for the A > D > C > B > A path (clockwise path):
l
1/(c - v
1)
-l
2/(c + v
2)
Sagnac phase components for the A > B > C > D > A path (counterclockwise path):
l
2/(c - v
2)
-l
1/(c + v
1)
For the single continuous clockwise path we add the components:
l
1/(c - v
1) - l
2/(c + v
2)
For the single continuous counterclockwise path we add the components:
l
2/(c - v
2) - l
1/(c + v
1)
The net phase difference will be (let us remember that the counterclockwise phase difference has a negative sign attached to it, that is why the substraction of the phase differences becomes an addition):
{l
1/(c - v
1) - l
2/(c + v
2)} - (-){l
2/(c - v
2) - l
1/(c + v
1)} = {l
1/(c - v
1) - l
2/(c + v
2)}
+ {l
2/(c - v
2) - l
1/(c + v
1)}
Rearranging terms:
l
1/(c - v
1) - l
1/(c + v
1)
+ {l
2/(c - v
2) - l
2/(c + v
2)} =
2(v
1l
1 + v
2l
2)/c
2Exactly the formula obtained by Professor Yeh:
φ = -2(φ
2 - φ
1) = 4π(R
1L
1 + R
2L
2)Ω/λc = 4π(V
1L
1 + V
2L
2)/λc
Since Δφ = 2πc/λ x Δt, Δt = 2(R
1L
1 + R
2L
2)Ω/c
2 = 2(V
1L
1 + V
2L
2)/c
2CORRECT SAGNAC FORMULA:
2(V1L1 + V2L2)/c2Self-pumped phase-conjugate fiber-optic gyro, I. McMichael, P. Yeh, Optics Letters 11(10):686-8 · November 1986
http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a170203.pdf (appendix 5.1)
This is how the correct Sagnac formula is derived: we have single continuous clockwise path, and a single continuous counterclockwise path.
If we desire the Coriolis effect, we simply substract as follows:
dt = l
1/(c - v
1) - l
1/(c + v
1) - (l
2/(c - v
2) - l
2/(c + v
2))
Of course, by proceeding as in the usual manner for a Sagnac phase shift formula for an interferometer whose center of rotation coincides with its geometrical center, we obtain:
2v
1l
1/(c
2 - v
21) - 2v
2l
2/(c
2 - v
22)
l = l
1 = l
22l[(v
1 - v
2)]/c
22lΩ[(R
1 - R
2)]/c
2R
1 - R
2 = h
2lhΩ/c
2By having substracted two different Sagnac phase shifts, valid for the two different segments, we obtain the CORIOLIS EFFECT formula.
However, for the SAGNAC EFFECT, we have a single CONTINUOUS CLOCKWISE PATH, and a single CONTINUOUS COUNTERCLOCKWISE PATH, as the definition of the Sagnac effect entails.
HERE IS THE DEFINITION OF THE SAGNAC EFFECT:
Two pulses of light sent in opposite direction
around a closed loop (either circular or a single uniform path), while the interferometer is being rotated.
Loop = a structure, series, or process, the end of which is connected to the beginning.
A single continuous pulse A > B > C > D > A, while the other one, A > D > C > B > A is in the opposite direction, and has the negative sign.
We can see at a glance each and every important detail.
For the Coriolis effect, one has a formula which is proportional to the area; only the phase differences of EACH SIDE are being compared, and not the continuous paths.
For the Sagnac effect, one has a formula which is proportional to the velocity of the light beam; the entire continuous clockwise path is being compared to the other continuous counterclockwise path exactly as required by the definition of the Sagnac effect.
Experimentally, the Michelson-Gale test was a closed loop,
but not mathematically. Michelson treated mathematically each of the longer sides/arms of the interferometer as a separate entity: no closed loop was formed at all. Therefore the mathematical description put forth by Michelson has nothing to do with the correct definition of the Sagnac effect (two pulses of light are sent in opposite direction
around a closed loop) (either circular or a single uniform path). By treating each side/arm separately, Michelson was describing and analyzing the Coriolis effect, not the Sagnac effect.
Loop = a structure, series, or process, the end of which is connected to the beginning.
Connecting the two sides through a single mathematical description closes the loop; treating each side separately does not. The Sagnac effect requires, by definition, a structure, the end of which is connected to the beginning.