Optical measurement of a fundamental constant with the dimension of time
B. V. Gisin

TL;DR
This paper explores the theoretical and experimental implications of a non-Galilean transformation involving a fundamental constant of time, proposing optical methods to measure this constant and its relevance across physics.
Contribution
It introduces a new concept of a rotating reference frame with a non-Galilean transformation containing a time dimension constant, and discusses experimental testing in optics, relativity, and quantum mechanics.
Findings
Proposes a non-Galilean transformation with a time constant
Suggests optical experiments to measure this constant
Analyzes implications across physics domains
Abstract
We consider the concept of a rotating reference frame with the axis of rotation at each point and the applicability of this concept to different areas of physics. The transformation for the transition from the resting to rotating frame is assumed to be non-Galilean. This transformation must contain a constant with dimension of time. We analyze different possibilities of experimental testing this constant in optics, as most suitable field for measurements presently, and also in general relativity and quantum mechanics
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Measurement and Uncertainty Evaluation · Advanced Frequency and Time Standards · Advanced Measurement and Metrology Techniques
