From the SelectedWorks of Milan Meszaros physicist 2001 Significance of the Sagnac Effect Milan Meszaros Available at: http://works.bepress.com/milan_meszaros/19/ SIGNIFICANCE OF THE SAGNACEFFECT: BEYOND THE CONTEMPORARYPHYSICS PAL R. MOLNAR AND MILAN MESZAROS The Alpha Foundation,Institute of Physics,Budapest,Hungary CONTENTS I. The Paradigm A. AnalyticalViewpoint B. Profound Evidence and Connections il. Historical Overview A. The Main Experiments B. The Turning Point: Michelson-Morley Experiment C. The Sagnac-TypeExperiments III. Analysis of Michelson-Morley Experiment A. The Least-ArbitrarinessPrinciple: The NecessaryHidden Variables B. The Lorentz Interpretationof M-M Experiments C. The Einstein Interpretationof M-M Experiments D. Interferometers:Standing-WaveSystems IV. Analysis of Sagnac-TypeExperiments A. The ClassicalArrangements B. The RelativisticCalculation C. The Incompletenessof the Theory of Light V. Summary References I. THE PARADIGM A. AnalyticalViewpoint During the historicaldevelopment,the notionsof electrodynamicsandthe theory of light havebecomecomplicatedcomplexesof concepts[1]. And what is more, nowadaysthey are incomplete,or in the worst casewholly confusing.The laws Modern Nonlineor Optics, Part 3, Second Edition, Advances in Chemical Physics,Volume I19, Edited by Myron W. Evans.SeriesEditors I. Prigogine and StuartA. Rice. ISBN 0-471-38932-3 O 2001 John Wilev & Sons,Inc. 387 388 PAL R. MOLNAR AND MILAN MESZAROS of electrodynamicsin their presentform are not valid in rotating and deforming systemsin general[2]. Theseturbulentnotion complexes-which areinadequate for the inner connectionsa, s verifiedby experimentsm, easuremenrtesults,and certain electrodynamicalstatesand processes-have to be broken open, disintegrated,and then disjoined. Henceforth, we must searchfor those genuine, pure, and simple electrodynamicalideas that can be joined in an imminent natural and adequatemanner.Consequently,progresscan be achievedonly by carefulanalysis. Some of the unsolved problems in contemporary electrodynamics draw attention to deeper(more profound) evidence,new ideas and new theoriesor equations.The aim of this historical introduction is to find the deeperevidence and new basic conceptsand connectionsT. he guiding principle is the investigation of light propagation. B. Profound Evidence and Connections The childhoodof opticswas in ancientreligiousEgypt. The first survivedwritten relics of the opticsoriginatesfrom antiqueGreekscience.Euclid wasregardedas one of the founders of geometric optics becauseof his books on optics and catoptrics(catoptriclight, reflectedfrom a mirror). The geometricdescriptionof the light propagationand the kinetics description of motion were closely correlatedin the history of science.Among the main evidenceof classicalNewtonianmechanicsis Euclideangeometrybased on optical effects.In Newtonianphysics,spacehasan affine structurebut time is absolute.The basic idea is the inertial system,and the relations are the linear forcelaws.The affinestructureallowslineartransformationsin spacebetweenthe inertial coordinatesystems.but not in time. This is the Galilean transformation: x':xlxolvt, tt:tlto (r) This is a law of choice for any motion equation. The revolution in physicsat the end of nineteenthcentury was determinedby the new properties of light propagation and heat radiation. However, there remain many unsolvedproblemsin thesefields [2]. The laws of soundpropagationin differentmediaincludethe conceptof ether, which is the hypotheticalbearingsubstanceof light and electromagneticwaves. II. HISTORICAL OVERVIEW A. The Main Experiments The first measurementfor the determinationof velocity of soundwas made by Mersennein 1636.In 1687 Newton gave a rough formula for the velocity of sound.It was further developedby Laplace in 1816, basedon the adiabatic SIGNIFICANCE OF THE SAGNAC EFFECT changesof statesfor gasesI.n 1866Kundt constructedthe so-calledKundt tube, which can determinethe velocity of soundin liquids and solid materials.He found that thevelocity of soundgrowsbecauseof the solidity of bearermaterials. In the frameworkof classicalmechanics,this observationinspiredthe notion that ether is an extremely solid substance. The first attempt to determinethe speedof light was made by Galileo in 164l. Descartesassumedan infinite speedof light basedon the unsuccessful Galilean measurement. ln 1676, after 20 years of observationof the motion of Jupiter's Io moon, Rcimerpublishedhis result about the speedof light, which was calculatedas c :220,000 km/s [3]. In 1727Bradley performeda much more preciseexperimentto determinethe speedof light. His measurementswere basedon the aberrationof stars,and the resultsof thesemeasurementcslosely approximatedtoday's values. Arago was the first to measurethe speedof light under laboratoryconditions [4]. This measuremengt avethe Bradley'svaluefor the speedof light. In 1850 Arago's followers Foucault [5], and Fizeau [6] proved that the speedof light is higher in air than in liquid. Thesemeasurementscloseddown the old debatein the spirit of the wave nature of light. In that time this seemedto verify the concept of ether as the bearing substanceof light. The first experimental investigation for the magnitude of change in light speedin moving mediawasmadeby Fizeauin 1851 tTl.His experimentproved that the velocity of the propagationis greaterin the direction of motion of the medium than in the oppositedirection; that is, the light is carried along with the moving medium. This theory was developedand confirmed by Michelson and Morley in 1886.In 1926Michelson developedthe Foucault'srotating-mirror experiment.The result of Michelson'sexperiment[8] is c :2.99169 x 10o* 4 x 105m/s [wherec is (longitudinal)speedof light]. B. The Tirrning Point: Michelson-Morley Experiment In 1867Maxwell publishedhis book on electromagnetism[9]. Maxwell's work has a basic importance,not only in the electromagnetismbut also in optics. It also provided a common frame of referencefor the propagationof electromagnetic and light waves. The Maxwell equationsare valid only in the unique inertial coordinatesystem, but they are not invariant for the Galilean transformation(1). This means that the Maxwell equationsdo not satisfythe requirementsof classicalequation of motion. This problem was apparently solved by the introduction of the conceptof ether,the bearing substanceof light. The challengewas to determine ether as the unique inertial system,or earth's motion in this ether. Maxwell in anotherwork [10] raised the question as to whether the translation motion of the earth relative to the ether can be observedexperimentally. 390 PAL R. MOLNAR AND MILAN MESZAROS An electromagneticinertial system could be found by measurement,which could be usedin astronomicacl alculationsas well. Furthermore,spacemust be provided for formulating an equation of motion that is less rigorous than that used in Galilean relativity theory. Numerous unsuccessfulmeasurementswere made to determinethe motion of earth in the ether. These measurementswere not able to give results compatible within the framework of classical Newtonian mechanics,even though that the earthhasan orbital velocity vn - 30,000m/s (wherev, is velocity of the earthto the ether).In 1887Michelson and Morley also determinedthe earth's orbital velocity by their precisioninterferometer[ 1]. The updatedarrangement of Michelson-Morleyexperiment(M-M experiment)can be seenin Fig. 1. According to classicalmechanics,the traveling times of light T for the arms d1 andd2 canbe given as Follows: T o A o:,2 d t --, = 2dz 1 Toao':;@ (2) c l-(vzlczl' Fitting the length of interferometer'sarms-according to the zero difference of traveling times (zerc interference)-it is given that AZ : ToBo,- Tsys, - Q. Then the lengths of two arrnscan be determinedexactly: ,Fg dr: dz (3) M1 M1* Figure 1. An up-to-date arrangementthe of Michelson-Morley experiment. Here LASER meansthe sourceof light, BS meansbeamsplitter,Ml and M2 aremirrors on the end of arms,PD is the phasedetector (interferometer),and v is the earth's orbital velocity, which is regardedas the inertial motion fbr short time periods. SIGNIFICANCE OF THE SAGNAC EFFECT 391 Accordingto classicalphysics,the differenceof travelingtimesAZ* andthe interferencepicture must be changed,turned around the instrument with 90": \tla) @, LT* : Tbur, - Tb.qo:, c (, ,r - 2 , 1t 1, \v'lc') {" -d2 SubstitutingEq. (3) into Eq. (4) and arranging,the traveling time differencefor v2