I will try a couple of answers. "Why" is a very deep question. Science tries to explain "how" things work, but often cannot explain the deeper question of "why." The speed of light at 186,282 mps is one of the many constants of nature which we find in the universe around us. Call it a whim of God if you like. Some people talk about the "permeability of space" limiting the speed of light, but that only pushes the question back a step. What and why is permeability?arian wrote:You are right olavisjo, and I believe JohnPaul is right too, in my case anyways. I did not consider what would happen if my gun was either moving closer or farther AS it was shooting out water, and your pulsating water gun clearly shows what would happen. From space, as the source (which is my water gun) moved away as it was shooting, the intervals of each pulse would be farther apart, but what about light which is claimed is constant no matter how its being emitted, coming or going away from the target?olavisjo wrote: .I think that you missed it too.JohnPaul wrote: This is getting tedious. Again, I ask if you are joking? I completely agree with everything you wrote in your description of your experiment, EXCEPT you completely ignored any mention of the whole point of this discussion, the measurement of the speed of the water as it moves between the hose nozzle and the target. Its back-and-forth motion is irrelevant. To measure this speed, we must know the distance between the nozzle and the target, and also a way of comparing the exact times at which the water leaves the nozzle and the time at which it strikes the target. That was the whole point of Roemer's observation. How did you miss it?
The experiment has nothing to do with the speed, time or distance it left the hose (Jupiter) till it got to the garage door (Earth).
The experiment is better described as a constant pulsating beam of water shot at a moving car (Earth).
When the car is going toward the hose it will hit rapidly ta-ta-ta, but when the car is going away it will hit slower pahdah-pahdah-pahdah. Then if you know the distance the car traveled during the pulse of water, then the difference in time of the two pulses hitting the car and the distance the car traveled will allow you to calculate the speed of the water.
I do understand that light has to be a constant which I thought as INSTANT, but if the Jupiter's moon Io experiment was honest, then light does have a speed, and for this to work, it HAS to be constant.
But then I have to put it in such a perspective where I could visualize this. I understand what JohnPaul is saying, and according to that observation of Io, light would seem to have speed, actually in that sense it must have speed and a constant one at that. But I still have to figure it out in my own simple way to be able to see it in my own mind.
OK, if the speed limit of light in this universe is 186,282 m/p/s MAX
My biggest problem now is to understand this speed limit of light. OK, so I visualize a ship with headlights traveling let's say 170,000 m/p/s, and then turns on his headlights, so with a speed limit on light, that light coming out of the headlight, within this universe can only be 186,282-170,000=16,282 m/p/s, which keeps the light within the universal speed limit of 186,282 m/p/s.
But from my ships perspective, my frame of reference I have a light front of me and originating from me, .. a beam of light that is only traveling at a speed of 16,282 m/p/s
what is wrong with this picture?
I thought that from any source, from any perspective LIGHT is a CONSTANT?
Another word, when I asked about a sun on the outer skirts of the fabric of our universe traveling near or faster than the speed of light, what speed did the light emanating from the front of that sun travel?
I was told that 'light travels at 186,282 m/p/s no matter which direction the source (in this case the sun) was traveling'. And since the source is a sun, it is emanating light in every direction at a constant C.
How is this explained?
Thanks for anyones input.
The question about the relativistic effect of the earth's speed in its orbit on observations of light from Jupiter's moon is that the speed of the earth in its orbit at only 19 mps is so very small compared to the speed of light that no relativistic effects are noticeable.
As for your question about the spaceship moving at 170,000 mps and emitting a beam of light ahead of it, the answer would be different depending on whether you are observing it from earth or from the moving ship. Remember that the speed of light is ALWAYS measured as 186,282 mps for ALL observers, no matter what the speed of the observer may be. By ordinary everyday experience on earth, the speed of the beam of light limited to 186,282 mps should seem to the ship's crew to be travelling at only 16,282 mps relative to the ship, but you are forgetting about the relativistic time dilation for the ship at that speed, which means that a second to them is longer (as measured from earth), so the beam of light seems to them to travel farther in their longer version of a second. So, as measured by the ship's crew using ship's time, the beam of light is travelling away from them at 186,282 mps while they seem to be standing still. I know this is confusing at first exposure to it, and is difficult to keep straight in your mind while trying to visualize it. Incidentally, both Relativity and Quantum physics contain ideas which are actually impossible for the human mind to visualize and can only be expressed mathematically.
Welcome to the deep end of the pool. I welcome corrections to what I have written above.