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by aphyr
5361 days ago
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I've done the direct propagation measurement. Took about 20 hours (design, build, runs, analysis, report) in a four-person team, to obtain a value of .97 c. Laser, beam restrictor, beamsplitter, rotating mirror, and a 40 meter hallway with a mirror at the end. As the photons are traveling from the rotating mirror down the hall and back the mirror rotates slightly. Measuring the angular displacement of the beam with respect to the rotation speed gives you c. We used a low-res linear CCD array and oscilliscope, but you could probably do it at home... maybe with a dSLR sensor with suitably high response. You'd need a measurement of the CCD pixel density, but that wouldn't be too hard to find online. Then just handling the time sync issues. |
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I did this as an experiment in a junior physics lab last semester. It felt like cheating. All you needed was twenty feet of space.