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| ====== Interferometer ====== | ====== Interferometer ====== | ||
| - | The Fiber-Optic Michelson-Morley | + | The Fiber-Optic Michelson-Morley |
| - | There are many types of interferometers, | + | |
| - | This article focuses on the interferometer that is used in this experiment | + | |
| + | An interferometer is an instrument in which the interference of two beams of light is employed to make precise measurements. Precise means a fraction of the wavelength of light. The wavelength of light used in FOMMX is on the order of one micron, $10^{-6}$ meters. | ||
| - | An instrument | + | The word // |
| - | The phrase “interference | + | Here's a common activity that can be described in terms of //phase//. Consider a bigger person pushing a child on a swing. The person does not push constantly, except perhaps when starting the swinging. Once the child is swinging back and forth, the person pushes in the same direction that the swing is moving at that instant to swing higher. The child and the person are not beams of light, but it does illustrate |
| + | In a Michelson interferometer, | ||
| - | The Michelson interferometer | + | In the photo-finish of a horse race, the photo shows how far back the second place horse is behind the winner. Note that it does not tell how fast either horse is going, only how much more ground the winner covered than the second horse. This is a direct analogy to the interferometer. |
| - | The Michelson-Morley interferometer | + | |
| - | / * | + | In the 1800s, light was thought to be a wave in some sort of medium. By analogy, sound is known to be a wave in air and other mediums. The words Luminiferous Æther were intended |
| - | * Descriptions of interference | + | |
| - | * Pedaling a Bicycle, | + | |
| - | * apply forces | + | |
| - | * If you can move the chain and pedal and wheel in both directions, if you have the reverse phase the bicycle goes backwards. | + | |
| - | * Paddling | + | |
| - | * If you pull on both the panels at the same time, you go forward for a moment. When you lift the paddles from the water for another stroke, you coast. | + | |
| - | * The net process is going forward. | + | |
| - | * If you call one paddle back and push the other one forward, and then reverse with the paddles out of water, you won’t go forward it but your turn in the circle. | + | |
| - | * x. | + | |
| - | * If you pull on the paddles out of phase with each other, then you’ll turn a little bit to the right and go a little bit forward and then you’ll turn a little bit to the left and go a little bit forward. | + | |
| - | * If you pull on the paddles out of phase with each other then you’ll turn a little bit to the right and go a little bit forward, | + | |
| - | * and then you’ll turn a little bit to the left and go a little bit forward. | + | |
| - | * y. | + | |
| - | * Also, you’ll be using your arms only, not your bag. If you pull in sync when you’re using your whole body, especially your back and even legs. | + | |
| - | * There is a similar situation for electrons in an atom and, which by the way are standing waves, | + | |
| - | * | + | |
| - | * / | + | |
| + | Michelson calculated that the difference in the speed of light would be a detectable if the two arms of his interferometer were oriented so that one arm moved parallel to the Æther motion and the other moved perpendicular to it. He and Morley built such an interferometer and tested it in 1887. Based on all the assumptions involved, Michelson concluded that the small readings they obtained indicated that there was no such æther. | ||
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| + | The interferometer used in my experiment has the basic configuration as the original Michelson-Morley apparatus. The most important difference between that interferometer and mine is that the light path in my interferometer is formed by optical fiber rather than the mirrors used in the original. | ||
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| + | I claim that the mass density in the light path is a key condition determining the outcome of a Michelson-Morley experiment. | ||
| + | |||
| + | The difference between conventional experimental results and my results is explained by the difference between their mass density parameter and my mass density parameter. They chose a mass density near-zero, and I chose the mass density of glass, the core of optical fiber. Given that the claimed, previously unrecognized, | ||
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| + | This description is a great oversimplification. For one thing, there is a second previously unrecognized parameter. Also, various assumptions related to the expected and actual results need reexamined. | ||