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I have regularly heard that the Michelson-Morley experiment demonstrates that the speed of light is constant in all reference frames.

By doing some research I have found that it actually demonstrated that the luminiferous aether probably didn't exist and that the speed of light didn't vary depending on which direction the planet was travelling in. I don't see how it demonstrated that motion towards a light source for instance doesn't affect the observer's speed relative to the light, as there were no moving parts in the experiment.

The other sources I've looked at which say that the Michelson Morley experiment proved nothing like this one: Is the second postulate of Einstein's special relativity an axiom? and this one: How can we show that the speed of light is really constant in all reference frames? tend to say that Maxwell's equations were actually more significant to Einstein as they predict that light moves at a constant velocity, and this velocity has to be relative to something (or in relativity's case, everything). That something was thought to be the aether, but in the absence of that why could it not be relative to whatever emitted it? It seems like a more obvious immediate conclusion to come to than the idea that it's the same relative to everyone and all the counterintuitive results that ensue.

Another idea is that the speed of light is the universal speed limit and therefore must have a fixed value just to work under galilean relativity.

But then that argument goes in circles:

"Why can't you go faster than the speed of light?"

"Because otherwise your mass becomes infinite."

"Why does your mass become infinite?"

"Because of Einstein's special relativity."

But this is based on the original fact that you can't go faster than the speed of light, so there's no argument I can find which completely answers why the speed of light has to be constant, other than that it has been regularly tested since.

So my questions are:

  1. Is there something I'm missing about the Michelson-Morley experiment or Maxwell's equations which explains my objections and definitively shows that the speed of light is constant and it is impossible to go faster than it?

  2. If not, is there any other specific example, ideally which would have been there for Einstein, which I can use to explain to people with no knowledge of relativity why it is the case?

Qmechanic
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  • If the speed of light depended on the speed of the source, Bremsstrahlung and perhaps synchrotron radiation would look a lot different, and maybe the solar corona would have some time broadening....not sure what that would look like. It would also affect communication with interplanetary probes. – JEB Jul 21 '19 at 21:56
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    Michelson-Morley experiment played very little role in Einstein's own thinking. His thinking was more based on theoretical arguments from electrodynamics. He does mention in his original paper the Michelson-Morley experiment passingly as the "failure of attempts to detect a motion of the earth relative to the "light medium"". But it doesn't appear to be the central part of his argument. See: https://einsteinpapers.press.princeton.edu/vol2-trans/154 –  Jul 22 '19 at 02:38
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    A modern, maximally theoretical, and simplest way to arrive at the existence of an invariant speed that I have come across is in this paper called "Nothing but Relativity" by PB Pal: https://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0302045. –  Jul 22 '19 at 02:40
  • @FeynmansOutforGrumpyCat I second your point on this paper. Although it is neither the first with this idea nor is it mathematically rigorous (unlike some others). It is however an easy read clearly showing that the constancy of the local speed of light is a consequence of the uniformity and homogeneity of space and time. As long as the metric is twice differentiable, this condition is automatic in any frame locally in a small region. – safesphere Jul 22 '19 at 03:41
  • @safesphere Yes, I agree. I guess that the idea was first popularized by Mermin with his Relativity without Light article. However, I am not sure if I have found more rigorous treatments than one in the mentioned paper except maybe by Dixon in his book. It would be great if you could let me know of the more rigorous treatments. –  Jul 22 '19 at 03:51
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    @FeynmansOutforGrumpyCat I haven't done an extensive search (limited to an iPhone right now), but here is one paper: http://o.castera.free.fr/pdf/One_more_derivation.pdf - Plus also look for works of T. M. Kalotas & A. R. Lee on this subject. – safesphere Jul 22 '19 at 04:17
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    The Michelson-Morley experiment certainly did have a (rather large) moving part. The whole point of the experiment was that the Earth is moving. – Mike Scott Jul 22 '19 at 06:45
  • Yes, agreed, the earth is moving. However if you chuck a ball on earth it will still go at a velocity of earth velocity + ball velocity... I was asking more about the fact that this experiment doesn't show that earth velocity + light velocity = light velocity, but rather that earth velocity + light speed - earth velocity = earth velocity + light speed - earth velocity (due to the reference frame being moving too) – Arkleseisure Jul 22 '19 at 12:19
  • There is some difference between the two way speed of light and the one way speed of light. We can only measure (by means of a single clock) round trip speed of light, and it is always equal to c, despite of direction. MM experiment demonstrates isotropy of round trip speed of light but says nothing about the one way speed. One way speed of light cannot be measured prior to synchronisation of two spatially separated clocks. SR keeps one way speed of light to be equal to round trip speed, but it cannot be verified by any experiment. Look for the one way speed of light in Wikipedia. –  Jul 22 '19 at 13:22
  • @Arkleseisure But they repeated the experiment at a different time of year, when the Earth’s movement against a hypothetical privileged frame of reference (such as the aether) would have been different. – Mike Scott Jul 22 '19 at 14:55
  • @MikeScott That still doesn't explain why the privileged frame of reference can't be that of the emitter of the light source, as I mentioned in the question... The emitter seems like a logical conclusion to come to as that would be the case for any physical object, such as a ball. – Arkleseisure Jul 23 '19 at 12:49
  • An important point is that the MM experiment only rules out a specific set of possibilities. You need other experiments/observations to rule out other possibilities (see the post about the binary star systems). – Maximal Ideal Jul 24 '19 at 01:08
  • Because otherwise your mass becomes infinite. false; cf https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/34008/25301, https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/133376/25301, etc – Kyle Kanos Jul 24 '19 at 14:28

9 Answers9

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For a basic treatment of the Michelson-Morley experiment please see 1. It's not important to know the technical details of the experiment to answer your questions though. The only relevant thing is the result, let me put it in basic terms since you seem to struggle with the "physics slang":

While the total velocity of a ball thrown from a truck is the sum of the velocity of the ball relative to the truck and the velocity of the truck relative to the observer, the velocity of a light beam emitted from the truck is not. Much more the velocity of the light beam seems completely independent of the velocity of the truck.

Michelson and Morely didn't have a truck, they had the earth orbiting the sun.

Please make it clear to yourself that this experimental fact can be explained by stating that the speed of light is constant. If I say to you the speed of light is constant in every frame of reference, then the above result isn't surprising at all to you.

But you want more. You want me to prove to you that the speed of light is universally constant. I cannot. There will never be an experiment that shows that this axiom is universally true. How should one ever construct such an experiment, how should one, for example, test the theory in the Andromeda galaxy? It's impossible, but it doesn't matter: Why not just stick with the axiom, as long as we can explain everything we see around us with it?

As you already said there's an interesting connection between the invariance of the speed of light and Maxwell's equations. One can indeed prove that the speed of light has to be constant, otherwise, Maxwell's theory can't be true for all inertial frames. But this is no proof that can convince you either, since accepting Maxwells equations is no different to accepting the invariance of the speed of light. Furthermore, the basis of Einstein's theory is not the invariance of the speed of light, but the invariance of the speed of action. Which cannot be concluded from Maxwell's theory, even though it's a reasonable guess.

Physical theories are not provable. But as long as they comply with reality, we accept them as truths.

Addendum: I recommend this short lecture for layman by R. Feynman on the topic. Feynman and I present a very similar line of reasoning.

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    Thanks, I guess the question now becomes "is there any simple experiment which shows that the speed of light is the same in all reference frames (like the truck and the light beam one) which has already been done and I can quote at someone to whom I'm explaining SR?" – Arkleseisure Jul 22 '19 at 11:44
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    The "it's axiomatic" answer feels dissatisfying because one is then left wondering what the criteria are for phenomena to be 'allowed' to be explained away so. Why not just call all phenomena axiomatic? Why are scientists happy to call some surprising phenomena (e.g. constant speed of light) simply axiomatic while vexing long and hard over others (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unsolved_problems_in_physics)? – benxyzzy Jul 22 '19 at 17:26
  • @Arkleseisure There is, kind of: It has been conducted by Michelson and Morley. If you have difficulties following the technical details of the experiment you should create a new question or at least explain why you believe that it does not satisfy your criteria. But as I tried to explain there can never be an experiment that will show that it is necessarily TRUE in all reference frames. But the Michelson-Morley experiment is a strong hint. A very strong one. Another indirect confirmation: We can observe many effects that relativity predicts, indirectly confirming that it's axioms are true. –  Jul 22 '19 at 18:04
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    This answer seems to be hinging on the idea that the question is asking for undeniable proof and that the proof work everywhere (eg: Andromeda), but that doesn't feel like what the question asks, and the question never uses such terms. That leaves the answer feeling very lacking. Question merely states "how can we show X?" If we make claim X, we must be able to explain how we can show X. If we cannot even contemplate a way in which X could be demonstrated (ie: is falsifiable), then X tends to be called pseudoscience. Are you suggesting we throw "c is a constant" in the trash? – Aaron Jul 22 '19 at 18:09
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    @benxyzzy Your question is valid. And it probably deserves a more refined answer than what I can give as a comment. Anyways: Look at that list of problems. Most of them are very specific. Instead of just claiming a certain fact is axiomatic, physicists strive to derive such specific results from more fundamental concepts. A theory is considered elegant when it makes very little axiomatic assumptions but can explain a lot of specific results. It turned out in the past century, that there seems not to be a more fundamental concept, which underlies the invariance of the speed of light. –  Jul 22 '19 at 18:12
  • @Aaron Many non-physicist feel like there should be a proof for every physical axiom: " If we make claim X, we must be able to explain how we can show X." This is not how physics works. We make claims and adapt them if necessary. We often never proof these claims. It's mostly impossible to do that, the speed of light is an excellent example. Instead we focus on falsifying a theory via experiment and create a new one that can't be falsified that way. Because not being able to prove something does not mean it's not falsifiable, you should be careful with throwing around these terms. –  Jul 22 '19 at 18:24
  • @TheoreticalMinimum I agree completely with what you're saying, including your closing bit to "be careful with throwing around these terms." I think something like "Experiment A includes a measurement wherein the speed of light was measured to be the same in these two reference frames which were in motion relative to each other" or "Hypothetical experiment B is how we would falsify this" or anything of the sort would "show" the claim in question. Showing an apple falling on Newton's head doesn't "100% prove all objects fall", but it does "show all objects fall". – Aaron Jul 22 '19 at 19:49
  • @TheoreticalMinimum Perhaps we should ask OP for clarification, and if OP struggles with the terms perhaps you could help them fix the wording. – Aaron Jul 22 '19 at 19:49
  • R. Feynman discussing this topic in a part of his lecture for layman: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYPapE-3FRw –  Jul 23 '19 at 05:48
  • Invoking the Andromeda galaxy seems a bit silly. You can test that the speed of light is constant in a bunch of reference frames and get a pretty good level of confidence that the law holds. Everyone understands that our experiments technically only apply to the laws of physics on and around Earth. – Rag Jul 23 '19 at 12:11
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    We looked at a lot of things falling and got a "pretty good level of confidence that the law [newtons gravity] holds." Then we discovered the perturbations in the orbit of mercury that couldn't be explained that way. It's not silly. It's this skepticism which leads to discovery. This comment section is not the place for such philosophical debate though. I have nothing to add to my answer and will leave it here. –  Jul 23 '19 at 13:32
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    @benxyzzy Leaving philosophical questions aside: we evaluate which facts to raise to axioms by their predictive power: e.g. "my pen will lie on my desk five minutes from now" is true, but outside of the a very limited domain it has no predictive power. In 1904 Maxwell's Equations predict the speed of light. In which frame? What is the medium of propagation? How do you move to another frame? etc Einstein, with one stroke of the pen made all these problems disappear into the vacuum and found a unified theory of electromagnetism and mechanics. The predictivity of "v = c" is hard to overestimate. – tobi_s Jul 24 '19 at 01:06
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    I want to add one thing: $v=c$ is also a very natural statement about space and electromagnetism. Once you are far from everything, why should an EM wave know anything about the motion of some coordinate frames? Now, stated like this, the statement is very easy to accept BUT that is only so, because unlike Einstein's predecessors we are not prejudiced with complicated conceptions of what the vacuum is beyond "volume of space where EM waves propagate according to the homogeneous Maxwell equations." – tobi_s Jul 24 '19 at 01:12
  • @TheoreticalMinimum You started it. And of course you don't want to get into this debate, because the position you're trying to defend is ridiculous. Relativistic effects explained the mystery of Mercury, but they can absolutely be tested on Earth. Your original argument that special relativity is axiomatic and defies experimental proof because "something something, what about far away though" is a non sequitur. There's no sense in which special relativity is axiomatic but other scientific knowledge like the boiling point of methane is not. – Rag Jul 29 '19 at 04:07
  • @BrianGordon I felt like the first comment of tobi_s addressed the issue. You could indeed take the naive point of view that everything you observe is an axiom. Yes. But many of these observations don't have to be stated as axioms but can rather be deduced from other facts. And in order to keep your list of axioms as short as possible you only give the facts with the most predictive power the status of an axiom, all other facts are then theorems. This is what physicist strive for: A unified theory, based on a very small set of axioms, not an endless list of truths. –  Jul 29 '19 at 11:17
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It's hard to fully understand what you're asking but here are some things that might help:

  1. The Michelson-Morley (MM) experiments don't show the speed of light is constant, it just rules out particular kinds of ether (the kind that can freely flow past particles). Ether is the supposed thing that light waves "oscillate" in.

  2. You are right to say that's circular reasoning.

  3. Maxwell's equations don't prove the speed of light is constant. But they suggest it if you also assume it's not possible to tell which frame you are in.

  4. Einstein came to his conclusions based on gut instinct that electromagnetism had to obey the principle of relativity. He took this one step further and decided to elevate the idea to a principle and see what that lead to.

  5. There is no proof the speed of light is constant except experiment - you can't do it theoretically. There are some arguments that came after Einstein, based on the idea of causality, etc.

  6. Remember Einstein did physics by having convictions about the way the world worked and this worked exceptionally well for relativity but not for quantum non-locality.

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    Maxwell's equations do dictate that the speed of light is $c$ in all the frames in which Maxwell's equations are valid. Thus, if Maxwell's equations are valid in all inertial frames then the speed of light has to be the same in all inertial frames. Also, it is a bit of an exaggeration to say that Einstein's postulates were based on gut instincts. There were strong theoretical reasons to suspect that Maxwell's equations were true in all inertial frames. –  Jul 22 '19 at 02:27
  • As far as I'm aware Maxwell's equations don't dictate the 2nd principle of relativity. The wave speed does appear in Maxwell's equations just as it appears in the wave equations for sound, which aren't covariant. If there's a derivation proving that then please share a link. – kotozna Jul 22 '19 at 05:01
  • @kotozna Maxwell's equations are considerably different from the fluid equations. In particular, there is no analog of the bulk velocity, which creates a preferred reference frame and nonlinearity in the equations. – eyeballfrog Jul 22 '19 at 14:49
  • @eyeballfrog: We know that now, but if you were a 19th-century physicist, the idea of a preferred rest frame (namely, the rest frame of the æther) was still very much a live possibility. – Michael Seifert Jul 22 '19 at 15:57
  • @eyeballfrog Sure, you have to make approximations to get there for a fluid, but once you do there are analogues of vector and scalar potential wave equations. It is possible to construct special relativity for ultrasound waves, for example (this has been done). It is possible to have propagating nonlinear features in a fluid that have no associated bulk velocity. – kotozna Jul 22 '19 at 17:29
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That something was thought to be the aether, but in the absence of that why could it not be relative to whatever emitted it?

This seems to be the key point of your question.

Now, historically speaking this alternative had already been ruled out on theoretical grounds, because it isn't compatible with Maxwell's equations. However, since you are asking for experimental evidence, consider astronomical observations of binary star systems: it seems obvious that if the speed of the light coming from a star in the part of its orbit when it is approaching us were different to the speed of light coming from the same star in the part of its orbit when it is going away from us, it would cause observable effects.

In order to help quantify the extent to which making the speed of light relative to the speed of the light source would affect astronomical observations, I did a Google search on the phrase "astronomical observations binary star systems speed of light" which found this article by Tedd Bunn, chair of the department of physics at the University of Richmond. The answer is that the effect would be extremely obvious:

[...] you might wonder whether this effect would be significant for real star systems. The answer is that it turns out to be extremely significant. The reason is that the stars are very far away. That means that, even though the difference in the light's speed at the top and bottom of the orbit would be very slight, the faster light would still have lots of time to overtake the slower light. In fact, in real star systems, you'd end up seeing not just three or five images of the star, but thousands of images.

Needless to say, we don't see that sort of thing at all, and that provides extremely strong evidence that the speed of light does not depend on whether the source is moving towards you or away from you.

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    I am surprised this has not been mentioned earlier (unless I misread), because this is a very apt answer that seems to have been missed by others. – Maximal Ideal Jul 24 '19 at 01:05
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I don't see how it demonstrated that motion towards a light source for instance doesn't affect the observer's speed relative to the light, as there were no moving parts in the experiment.

Given that the earth is moving through space - and that the experimental fixture was at rest with respect to the earth - it follows that the experimental fixture was in in motion with respect to the vacuum of space. And if that's the case, the experiment should have measured different speeds of light in different directions. Instead, however, it measured an isotropic speed of light.

Physicists interpreted this "null" result as evidence that the speed of light is independent of the motion of the observer. That is, observers always measure an isotropic speed of light - even when in motion.

That's the origin of the "principle of the constancy of the velocity of light".

If you are not spooked by alternative interpretations, you might find the following link interesting: link.

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As a stand-alone fact, the fact that nothing can go faster than the speed of light would be extremely hard to prove (and is not proved by Michelson-Morley experiment). But that fact is built into the Lorentz transformation, one of the key tenets of special relativity. In fact the Lorentz transformation is so fundamental that one can think of it as part of the “operating system” on which much of modern physics is built - if it wasn’t a fundamental law of nature, almost all of physics as we know it simply would not exist. And this is a vast body of knowledge whose validity has not only been demonstrated experimentally in countless experiments, but is essential to the functioning of many technological devices, including some that we see all around us in our daily lives. So the fact that all these technological devices work as they are supposed to provides ample (if indirect) evidence that the speed of light is the universal speed limit.

A couple of specific examples you can read about in various places (e.g., in this article) are old fashioned TVs based on cathode-ray tubes, and speed-measuring radar guns used by the police, both of which inventions need to take relativity into account in their design. For example, in CRT televisions, a beam of high-velocity electrons is deflected by a magnetic field to hit a specific point on the TV screen, causing that point to light up. These electrons are moving at a fairly sizable fraction of the speed of light (20-30 percent according to the article I linked to), so relativity predicts you have to “push” them with a stronger force in order to deflect them by the right amount than you would under Newtonian mechanics. This is an example of how a body’s inertial mass grows as its velocity increases, according to a formula which would cause the mass to approach infinity as the body’s speed approaches the speed of light. So, if you are willing to believe that one can extrapolate from this formula as it applies to objects moving at a quarter of the speed of light to things going at 99% of the speed of light or even faster, you should agree that CRT televisions give good “everyday life” evidence that nothing can go faster than light.

GenlyAi
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  • I can see how one could argue that the Lorentz transformations (or, more precisely, the fact that change of reference frames corresponds to a Lorentz transformations) show that if something is travelling slower than $c$ in one reference frame, then it is not travelling faster than $c$ in any reference frame, but I don't see any argument for the claim that they show in general that nothing can travel faster than $c$. – Acccumulation Jul 22 '19 at 15:22
  • @Acccumulation the way I think about it is that the Lorentz transformation is the definition of what it means to “travel with speed $v$” in a relativistic world. Since it can only accept parameters $v$ with $|v|<c$, those are the speeds at which one can travel. Of course one can always hypothesize some exotic mechanism for traveling faster than $c$ that doesn’t involve inertial, linear motion within the framework of Lorentz transformations (teleportation, wormholes etc). But within the sense of “travel with speed $c$” afforded us by “vanilla” relativity, $|v|<c$ is the only option. – GenlyAi Jul 22 '19 at 15:45
  • (And thanks for your “more precisely” correction - agreed, that was a slight sloppiness in my language.) – GenlyAi Jul 22 '19 at 15:46
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The issue is more subtle than that, and the way you've phrased it is technically wrong. There are "reference frames" you can create in which light, or photons, travel with a different speed. This came up here:

(hmm, can't find link atm)

referencing the case of thinking about the viewpoint of a spinning person - the stars at great distances will seem to move "faster than light" thanks to $v = r\omega$, and so too will the photons, i.e. "light speed" will be higher, in fact, at suitable distance, arbitrarily high. (E.g. if you spin at an $\omega$ of 1 rad/s, and $r$ is even $1\ \mathrm{Pm}$, i.e. only 1/40th the distance to the nearest star away from the Sun, already the $v$ is $1\ \mathrm{Pm}/s$, far in excess of $c$, i.e. $3 \times 10^{-7}\ \mathrm{Pm/s}$ on this scale.)

In special relativity it's not brought up, but it is crucial in general relativity, and since general relativity includes special relativity as a special case (hence the name), the same cosiderations, technically speaking, apply to it.

Relativity is really a theory of space and time, and as said, it "requires the language of events, not things" (ref). More particularly, relativity is a theory about the laws that govern flows of information throughout the Universe. In its purest form, we are really only concerned with one kind of question, and it is this:

"Can you send a message from event $A$ to event $B$?"

"Events" are just points in space-time, to which we attach a signifier. The answer to this question is either "yes" or "no", a binary answer. For every pair of events in space-time, we can ask such a question, and the theory of relativity provides a mathematical framework that describes when the answer is "yes" and when the answer is "no". It also lets us work out how things look from the viewpoint of being inside a universe where the information we receive is subject to these constraints, i.e. what we can and cannot gather from the information coming at us at the little points in space-time we occupy. All the "weirdness" of relativity traces to basically this. Special relativity describes the form of those relations in the absence of matter, while general relativity describes how they are altered by the presence of matter.

Coordinate systems, or "reference frames", are simply ways to label events. What labels you put on them do not change the relationships between them. If I label the inside of my house "cooties", and the outside "znabby", that doesn't change the basic relationship of interiority/exteriority that exists between them any more than if I label them "inside" and "outside", respectively. (Same if I decide to confusingly call the outside "inside" and the inside "outside".)

What the Michelson-Morley experiment shows is not directly a statement about what happens in reference frames, or a statement about "aether", even - it is entirely logically possible to imagine a Minkowskian space-time filled up with an aetheric medium just as one can imagine a Galilean one so filled. Rather, it is a demonstration that the behavior of communications - of messages - obeys the former set of flow rules, not the latter.

And those rules can essentially be described as saying there exist a class of reference frames (coordinates, labels) that you can put on events, such that the permissibility of communication takes the form of a speed limit, and the transformation between these frames leaves said speed limit fixed. The reference frames follow from the limits, not that the limits follow from the reference frames. And one more result of the experiment is that it shows us that light, specifically, is a real-life medium of communication that saturates the Universal speed limit (to at least the experiment's error bounds, of course).

When you relabel those with something else, like a rotating reference frame, of course these relationships become harder to describe mathematically, but they are still the same in that in both frames you will note that communication between the same sets of events is or isn't impossible. E.g. while light may be going "faster than light" in the rotating frame, you won't see any ships making a trip from Earth to Proxima b in less time than 4.3 years (barring of course potential things like wormholes that require GR and even more, still-unknown post-GR physics to fully treat and also to assess the (im)possibility of).

Now, as to why the communication rules in our Universe take this form, there really isn't an answer, at least that you can have in physics and to the best of our knowledge. The only way you can answer "why" in physics is if you can derive it, as you are suggesting, from a more fundamental principle, and your circular argument shows you can't, and moreover, when phrased as above it seems pretty damn fundamental already, so I would doubt that we will ever find such a reason. You have to start somewhere.

The best way to convey it is to just say that that our totality of empirical observation has been consistent with the idea that the Universe has a speed limit, and no exceptions have been found. That's it; it's "how it was made".

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There are several issues with claiming empirical "proof" of the speed of light being constant:

  1. The problem of induction: MM tested several different conditions, and the result of identical travel times was inconsistent with several hypotheses involving differing speeds of light. However, there's no way through experiment to conclusively rule out all hypotheses. All we can say is that at this point, Occam's Razor strongly support the constancy of the speed of light.

  2. The impossibility of measuring the speed of light from one point to another: It is impossible to measure the time that it takes for light to go from one point to another. The reason for this is that to measure the speed of light from point A to point B, you need to know the time at which the light left point A and the time it arrived at point B, which means that you need to sync up your clocks at the two points. Doing so requires sending a signal from one point to another with a timestamp, and then adjusting for travel time. But adjusting for travel time requires knowing the time it took, leading to circular reasoning. The only way to truly measure the speed of light is to measure the round trip time, which then gets you the average speed (for the appropriate meaning of "average"). If we assume that light travels at the same speed both away and towards us, then the speed in either direction is equal to the average speed. But it is completely consistent with empirical observations (albeit not with Occam's Razor) to establish a coordinate system in which light travels at a different speed depending on whether it's traveling toward us or away from us.

  3. "Reference frame" is a broad category: In the broadest sense, "reference frame" simply refers to a coordinate system. You probably mean "inertial reference frame". In non-inertial reference frame, the coordinate speed of light is not constant. Thus, to a large degree, "the speed of light is constant" is not a statement about the empirical world, but coordinate systems. Basically, it's "The speed of light is $c$ in any 'reasonable' coordinate system."

If we put aside those objections, then MM was reasonably conclusive.

there were no moving parts in the experiment.

Well, it took place on Earth, and Earth is moving in the solar system's reference frame.

I don't see how it demonstrated that motion towards a light source for instance doesn't affect the observer's speed relative to the light

MM compared the speed of light when it was traveling perpendicular to the Earth's motion versus parallel. If the motion of the detector relative to the light affected the speed, then those two conditions would have returned different results. Imagine a river, and you compare rowing a boat across the river and back, versus rowing it downstream then back. The travel times for those two roundtrips will be different, because the boat's speed changes depending on whether it's traveling with, against, or perpendicular to the current. Similarly, if the speed of light is affected by whether it's traveling with, against, or parallel to the motion of the Earth, then MM would have found a difference in travel time.

That something was thought to be the aether, but in the absence of that why could it not be relative to whatever emitted it?

Within the framework of Maxwell's equations, the propagation of light is due to changing electric field causing a changing magnetic field causing a changing electric field, etc. Once you have that, the propagation speed follows from the constants in Maxwell's equations. For the speed of propagation to depend on the speed of the emitter would require that these constants somehow change based on the emitter's speed.

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In response to question #1, yes, there are things you are missing about the M-M experiment and what exactly it showed, and why. Many excellent and detailed descriptions of it are available; have you consulted any of them? Regarding Maxwell's derivation of $$c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\eta \mu}},$$ he did not obtain $c$ = (that expression) $\pm$ (the velocity of the laboratory), which means that special relativity was woven into his equations in a way that had to wait on Einstein to definitively uncover.

I think that once you've grasped (#1), you'll be able to answer (#2), but I am willing to concede the point to one of the experts on this site.

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It can be shown by experiment that when light is emitted from a moving source, its wavelength changes but its speed doesn't. The Andromeda galaxy is an example. To prove that changes in wavelength don't affect the speed of light, you could fire several different color lasers at the reflector which astronauts put on the moon. You should get a return pulse in about 2.5 secs (the time varies slightly depending on exactly where the moon is in its elliptical orbit). If all the colors return in exactly the same time, you will have proved that although a change of speed by the source will change the wavelength, a change of wavelength doesn't mean there is a change of speed.

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