Ruler-changes and Relative Velocity
摘要
Simple signal-propagation effects make receding objects seem contracted and approaching objects seem elongated. These effects are theoretically photographable, and are proportional in strength to the frequency-change in the object's emitted light. In a one-dimensional version of the "barn-pole" experiment, a "moving" object's photographed image can appear doubly length-dilated according to fixed-aether theory, but only singly length-dilated according to SR. This expected difference might be charitably described as a form of photographable Lorentz contraction.
引用
@article{arxiv.physics/9807015,
title = {Ruler-changes and Relative Velocity},
author = {Eric Baird},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:physics/9807015},
year = {2007}
}
备注
HTML+GIF. The contraction values originally given in section V(A) were wrong and have been corrected, and section V has been rewritten to improve readability. Changes are documented in the HTML file header