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by Dylan16807
611 days ago
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Unfortunately, if the one-way speed of light is anisotropic, the correct time dilation factor becomes 1/(γ(1−κv/c)), with the anisotropy parameter κ between -1 and +1.[17] This introduces a new linear term, meaning time dilation can no longer be ignored at small velocities, and slow clock-transport will fail to detect this anisotropy. Thus it is equivalent to Einstein synchronization. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-way_speed_of_light A lot of scientists have thought about this. Step one is checking their work. |
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I see nothing there that would invalidate my synchrotron argument, though.