Posted: Tue Jul 10, 2018 2:02 am
The answer that I come up with is "it shouldn't need a windage adjustment, though a range adjustment could be helpful."
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phoenix1 wrote:QUOTE (phoenix1 @ Jul 9 2018, 10:02 PM) The answer that I could look up is "it shouldn't need a windage adjustment, though a range adjustment could be helpful."
I'm no physicist, but I would imagine wind would affect a laser. Not enough to make a $#@!ing difference with a hand deployed laser gun, but any medium a light is traveling through would affect it. More so at sea level, and in high humidity.SumVeritas wrote:QUOTE (SumVeritas @ Jul 9 2018, 06:06 PM) You're the physicist here
See, the thing is that light generally doesn't budge much regardless of the medium it's moving through. That's part of the conclusion we got from the Michelson-Morley experiments in 1887. Changing between one medium to another can be a little rough, but wind isn't going to change the homogeneity of air, if anything it would *remove* homogeneity, since it would act as a giant mixer $#@!ing up any layers that happened to form.Ryujin wrote:QUOTE (Ryujin @ Jul 9 2018, 08:18 PM) I'm no physicist, but I would imagine wind would affect a laser. Not enough to make a $#@!ing difference with a hand deployed laser gun, but any medium a light is traveling through would affect it. More so at sea level, and in high humidity.
No, that's not what the Michelson-Morley experiment demonstrated. Light quite obviously changes direction (refracts) in response to different media. Shine a laser through a glass of water until you're satisfied that this is the case.phoenix1 wrote:QUOTE (phoenix1 @ Jul 10 2018, 03:54 AM) See, the thing is that light generally doesn't budge much regardless of the medium it's moving through. That's part of the conclusion we got from the Michelson-Morley experiments in 1887.
The M-M experiment demonstrated that ether, if it exists, does not pass by the earth at a velocity very different than the velocity of earth's passage through a vacuum.cashto wrote:QUOTE (cashto @ Jul 10 2018, 11:33 AM) No, that's not what the Michelson-Morley experiment demonstrated. Light quite obviously changes direction (refracts) in response to different media. Shine a laser through a glass of water until you're satisfied that this is the case.
What the M-M experiment demonstrated is that there is no fixed absolute frame of reference that light travels in, no lumiferous aether which 'carries' light. If there was, then light would get a boost from earth's own movement through this aether in one direction, and a corresponding retarding effect when moving in the other direction -- similar to an airplane flight in a constant wind, it will always make a round-trip journey in longer time than if there is no wind (you will always lose more time flying against the wind on the return trip than you will gain flying with the wind).