Background. The present article investigates the reciprocal action of specific medium effects on electromagnetic waves propagation. The object of study is a moving dielectric, which at rest already demonstrate bianisotropic properties, i. e., it is a synthetic material, e. g., chiral media with Ω-particles. Bianisotropic material equations are the most general for describing the effects of electromagnetic waves interaction with complex medium. Studying and analyzing them is proving to be a notable scientific problem. Natural bianisotropy is a property of simple media under special conditions (state of motion, internal currents and diffusion processes), whereas artificial bianisotropy is an inherent property of the synthetic material itself (composite material, material with different metaparticles).
 Aim. The main goal of the work is to generalize the already available data. On it basis, then, obtain analytical expressions, which can be effectively used for the experiments designing, creating new computational techniques for solving direct and inverse electromagnetic diffraction problems.
 Methods. In this paper, analytical methods are applied to obtain the resulting close-form expressions.
 Results. Three classes of effects have been identified that have a significant reciprocal effect on each other: gyrotropy, spatial dispersion, and temporal dispersion. In this article it was shown that the gyrotropy of the medium has not only a simple additive effect, but under some, specific conditions, can be related to the system emergence.
 Conclusion. The reciprocal action of the spatial dispersion of the moving chiral medium, generally has different scales in range. Temporal dispersion was investigated, which does not have a simple additive property, because even an isotropic medium acquires fundamentally new material properties of bianisotropy when it moves.
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