ALICE LAW EXPERIMENTS and SPECIAL RELATIVITY


Han Erim

1 December 2009

In this article I will present my own thoughts on how the Alice Law can be experimentally verified.

The Alice Law tells us the following in summary: Light travels according to the motion of the target object, and the speed of light relative to the target is always c (the speed of light). Therefore, what needs to be done is to reveal this unique property of light by means of an experiment.

I will also propose several example experiments here.

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Figure 1 – In the animation, an object moves from point A to point B. When the object reaches point O, we trigger a laser device. The target of the emitted light is point O, but due to the motion of the object, the direction of the light will change. The Alice Law expresses precisely this.

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Figure 2 – When a laser beam is directed to point O on a rotating platform, the target position changes as the platform rotates, and therefore the path of the light deviates.

Field Principle: Every part of an object is itself a separate object, and each object has its own field. The laser beam moves within the field of the target part. Since point O moves, it carries its field along with it, and therefore carries the beam and causes its path to deviate.

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Figure 3 – If we continuously aim a laser beam at a rotating object, the beam will deviate depending on the direction of rotation.

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Figure 4 – By reflecting the laser beam from a rotating mirror, the deviation can be increased. By using parallel mirrors, the deviation of the beam can be magnified and easily measured.

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Figure 5 – Using large distances and precision equipment, various other experimental setups can be created.

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Figure 6 – By using multiple rotating mirrors, the propagation direction of light can be changed. This experiment is easier to perform than the others.

Click here for detailed information.

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Figure 7 – The behavior of light reflected from two parallel mirrors: If both mirrors move together, the reflections do not change. If only one mirror moves, the number of reflections changes.

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Figure 8 – By using two different mirrors, the change in the direction of light can be observed on a large scale.

ALICE LAW EXPERIMENTS and UNIVERSITY PHYSICS DEPARTMENTS

Physicists, I encourage you to perform the Alice Law experiments—which are of vital importance for you—as soon as possible.

It would be a great honor to host the Alice Law experiments and to be a part of these studies. I would be happy to support such work.

Han Erim

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