Is such a thing even possible?
Is such a thing even possible?
On 9/29/2023 7:33 AM, Alan B wrote:
Is such a thing even possible?I'm sure the LIGO devices are pretty damn close!
On 9/29/2023 7:33 AM, Alan B wrote:
Is such a thing even possible?I'm sure the LIGO devices are pretty damn close!
On Saturday, 30 September 2023 at 06:31:24 UTC+1, Volney wrote:
On 9/29/2023 7:33 AM, Alan B wrote:
Is such a thing even possible?I'm sure the LIGO devices are pretty damn close!
Sensitivity maybe yes. But for MMX to be of any use
one has to be able rotate the table on its Mercury bed
to check if each arm gets the same reading both
n+S and E-W
You can’t rotate any of the arms at Hanford or Livingston
They always point the same direction.
So LIGO could never be a MMX device.
On Saturday, 30 September 2023 at 06:31:24 UTC+1, Volney wrote:
On 9/29/2023 7:33 AM, Alan B wrote:Sensitivity maybe yes. But for MMX to be of any use
Is such a thing even possible?I'm sure the LIGO devices are pretty damn close!
one has to be able rotate the table on its Mercury bed
to check if each arm gets the same reading both
n+S and E-W
You can’t rotate any of the arms at Hanford or Livingston
They always point the same direction.
So LIGO could never be a MMX device.
On 9/30/2023 4:59 AM, Lou wrote:
On Saturday, 30 September 2023 at 06:31:24 UTC+1, Volney wrote:
On 9/29/2023 7:33 AM, Alan B wrote:
Is such a thing even possible?I'm sure the LIGO devices are pretty damn close!
Sensitivity maybe yes. But for MMX to be of any useThey rotate with the earth.
one has to be able rotate the table on its Mercury bed
to check if each arm gets the same reading both
n+S and E-W
You can’t rotate any of the arms at Hanford or Livingston
They always point the same direction.
So LIGO could never be a MMX device.
LIGO arms can’t rotate 90degrees,
On Saturday, 30 September 2023 at 16:52:39 UTC+1, Volney wrote:
On 9/30/2023 4:59 AM, Lou wrote:
On Saturday, 30 September 2023 at 06:31:24 UTC+1, Volney wrote:They rotate with the earth.
On 9/29/2023 7:33 AM, Alan B wrote:
Is such a thing even possible?I'm sure the LIGO devices are pretty damn close!
Sensitivity maybe yes. But for MMX to be of any use
one has to be able rotate the table on its Mercury bed
to check if each arm gets the same reading both
n+S and E-W
You can’t rotate any of the arms at Hanford or Livingston
They always point the same direction.
So LIGO could never be a MMX device.
LIGO arms can’t rotate 90degrees, like the MMX arms do on the
Mercury bed in the original experiment.
Are you suggesting that if the Michelson Morley experimental setup
could not have been rotated on a Mercury bed....they could still have confirmed a null result?
In that case..why did they bother with rotating the setup on a Mercury bed?
On Sunday, October 1, 2023 at 5:52:57 AM UTC-7, Lou wrote:
LIGO arms can’t rotate 90degrees,
Dumb-du-ram-dumb
On Sunday, October 1, 2023 at 8:35:04 PM UTC-6, Dono. wrote:
On Sunday, October 1, 2023 at 5:52:57 AM UTC-7, Lou wrote:
LIGO arms can’t rotate 90degrees,
Dumb-du-ram-dumbI'm responding to this message only to keep it from getting buried
in the spam. Okay, a question: why does anyone respond to Lou?
He obviously has mental problems.
On 10/1/2023 8:52 AM, Lou wrote:
On Saturday, 30 September 2023 at 16:52:39 UTC+1, Volney wrote:
On 9/30/2023 4:59 AM, Lou wrote:
On Saturday, 30 September 2023 at 06:31:24 UTC+1, Volney wrote:They rotate with the earth.
On 9/29/2023 7:33 AM, Alan B wrote:
Is such a thing even possible?I'm sure the LIGO devices are pretty damn close!
Sensitivity maybe yes. But for MMX to be of any use
one has to be able rotate the table on its Mercury bed
to check if each arm gets the same reading both
n+S and E-W
You can’t rotate any of the arms at Hanford or Livingston
They always point the same direction.
So LIGO could never be a MMX device.
LIGO arms can’t rotate 90degrees, like the MMX arms do on theLIGO rotates along with the earth, just like you've been whining about
Mercury bed in the original experiment.
the MMX for the last zillion or so posts. Wait 6 hours for a 90 degree rotation.
Are you suggesting that if the Michelson Morley experimental setupIt would have taken longer, but yes. Didn't they also wait 6 months to capture the ether wind from the other direction?
could not have been rotated on a Mercury bed....they could still have confirmed a null result?
In that case..why did they bother with rotating the setup on a Mercury bed?To get more useful readings in a shorter time.
I think the mercury was also used for isolation from vibrations.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 427 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 37:07:33 |
Calls: | 9,029 |
Files: | 13,384 |
Messages: | 6,009,098 |