If the rest frame has all values 0 and only -Y electric field exists then there is additional N' magnetic field in the moving frame after transformation from the rest frame to the moving frame.
That is the reason why electrons will start to drift.
If.
But again, this isn't how an LED works. The outgoing photon produces whatever impulse it produces REGARDLESS of which way the electron is drifting. The electron's direction of motion isn't relevant. The magnetic field isn't relevant. How do I know? Because you can change them all without changing the photon's impulse.
Electrons are suppose to move in a 'straight' path in the electric field in the rest frame.
But they are going to drift in the moving frame due to N' magnetic field.
This is a contradiction between inertial reference frames.
OK, now you're talking about something completely different. This has NOTHING to do with LED flashlights. This is a completely different claim.
But let's actually do the calculations for this completely different scenario anyways. In the rest frame, we have no magnetic field, and an electric field vertical. To use your equations, we need the direction y to be vertical (positive up), sideways is x (positive right), and out of the page z. These equations were written with the assumption that positive v is to the right, but that's the velocity of the moving frame relative to the rest frame. You've actually got the frame moving to the left, so keep in mind that v is negative.
So using arbitrary units (they won't end up mattering), we have
X = 0
Y = -1
Z = 0
L = 0
M = 0
N = 0
OK, so let's do the transformations.
X' = X = 0
Y' = gamma*[Y - (v/c)N] = -Beta
Z' = gamma*[Z - (v/c)M] = 0
L' = L = 0
M' = gamma*[M + (v/c)Z] = 0
N' = gamma*[N - (v/c)Y] = gamma*(v/c)
So we've got a magnetic field pointing into the page (remember, v is negative)
Now things are going to get a bit weird, and this is another case where you know enough to set up a problem with some subtleties, but not enough to actually understand them or how they resolve.
We start with an electron at rest in the rest frame. It experiences an upward force from the electric field. In the moving frame, the electric field is the same, so this force is also the same. But now it's moving to the right in a magnetic field, using vxB to get the direction, there's a force from the magnetic field pointing vertically. It will not deflect at all, it's still just being pushed vertically.
Now at this point, you might be asking why the force vertically should be changing. And now it's really getting messy. In relativity, F = dp/dt. But p is NOT equal to mv.
p = m
u/(1-u
2/c
2) (I'm using u as the speed of the electron, separate from the speed of the moving frame). Both p and u are vectors. So taking the time derivative of this is
messy. There's no reason to expect F to remain reference-frame dependent.
OK, but what if the electron is already moving? Then you've got a vertical component of velocity, when you cross that with the B field you should get a sideways component for the force. Doesn't that make the electron deflect to the side?
No, it doesn't. And this is where things get really weird. If the electron is moving vertically, then in the moving frame its momentum is at an angle. And one of the weird aspects of special relativistic mechanics is that because momentum isn't linear with velocity anymore, the direction of any VELOCITY change doesn't need to be parallel to the direction of MOMENTUM change. Basically, to keep the electron moving to the right at the same velocity as it picks up speed vertically, we actually need to add momentum to the right as well. And how do we get that extra momentum to the right to maintain rightward velocity? From your magnetic field.
This is actually a really interesting aspect of relativistic mechanics that you've stumbled upon. But you don't actually understand any of it, and you aren't equipped to even make any sense of it.
Furthermore, all of this can be set up with just an electron and a capacitor plate. You don't need an LED, you don't need any photons, you don't need any battery. It's a completely different problem which there's no point in needlessly complicating.
Pointing out the Hall effect shows this happens in (semi)conductors as well.
This is the physical reason for the flashlight rotation.
No, it isn't.
Yet one more irony to all of this, and another indicator that you really don't know what you're talking about in any of this, is that an LED works by using a p-n junction. And in a p-n junction, the Hall effect will show negative charge carriers on one side of the junction and positive charge carriers on the other. So the Hall voltages will be reversed, which means the electrons will be deflected in
different directions on each side of the junction.
None of this works the way you think it does.