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I'm not sure about holding this up to my face to take pictures if it's spinning that fast ;-) |
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The light is travelling perpendicular to the direction of motion. Is there actually any effect? |
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Hmm. Very interesting thought. |
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Why would the spinning glass bend the light? |
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As I remember (from Sagan's "Cosmos" videos), as an object in relativistic motion passes a point perpendicular to the observer, that object will appear skewed, or rotated, such that the leading edge will appear to be farther away from the viewer than the trailing edge. |
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(That's the Terrell effect, see link) |
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While spinning a glass disc to relativistic speeds would certainly be impossible outside of a thought experiment, it might be possible to develop a similar effect inside a free-electron laser cavity, with the electrons being magnetically accelerated in a circle, perpendicular to the length of the laser, using a betatron-like apparatus. |
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Anyway - besides the effect of Penrose-Terrell, you've got the Fitzgerald contraction to deal with as well, and I'm certain that will have an effect on the geometry, but my brain is getting melty (right-left artistic-logical smackdown) so I can't imagine quite... |
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OK, this was a stupid idea. |
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I disagree. It might be dangerous (in terms of aneurysms for theoretical physicists) but I think it's fun. |
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This is vaguely baked, in that ordinary refraction is interaction between light and the material's electrons (which are sorta-kinda spinning around in circles). |
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I thought this was going to be about spinning an elastic transparent object so that centrifugal force influences the shape and controls the focal length. Using this principle, a short-sighted person could achieve clarity by looking directly up and spinning in circles very fast. |
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//I thought this was going to be about spinning an elastic transparent object so that centrifugal force influences the shape and controls the focal length//
Very half baked. |
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I originally thought this idea was going to be about spinning a lens so that dust and distortions don't show up, which is also baked. |
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Spinning a pool of mercury at far less than relativistic
velocities makes a good parabolic reflector. |
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I expect similar forces would destroy the glass plate
long before it got to any measurable fraction of c. |
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