Pentcho Valev
2023-03-17 09:47:11 UTC
Brian Greene: "Whether you run toward or away from a beam of light, its speed will be unchanged when you measure it"
Here are George emitting equidistant light pulses and Gracie running towards him:
The speed of the pulses relative to the stationary Gracie is
c = df
where d is the distance between subsequent pulses and f is the frequency measured by the stationary Gracie. The speed of the pulses relative to the running Gracie is
c'= df' > c
where f' > f is the frequency measured by the running Gracie.
That is, the speed of light relative to the observer VARIES with the speed of the observer.
See more here: https://twitter.com/pentcho_valev
Pentcho Valev
Here are George emitting equidistant light pulses and Gracie running towards him:
The speed of the pulses relative to the stationary Gracie is
c = df
where d is the distance between subsequent pulses and f is the frequency measured by the stationary Gracie. The speed of the pulses relative to the running Gracie is
c'= df' > c
where f' > f is the frequency measured by the running Gracie.
That is, the speed of light relative to the observer VARIES with the speed of the observer.
See more here: https://twitter.com/pentcho_valev
Pentcho Valev