Difference between revisions of "Stimulated Forces Demonstrated: Why the Trouton-Noble Experiment Failed and How to Make It Succeed"
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− | The Trouton-Noble (TN) experiment is often cited for having substantiated the theory of relativity. Trouton and Noble believed that if a high-voltage capacitor experienced a ?spontaneous? jerking and torquing, this behavior would be a manifestation of the existence of the aether. Examination of the TN paper revealed that the experimenters had actually observed and recorded the phenomenon, but dismissed it as experimental error every time. Recent replications of the TN experiment have consistently demonstrated the jerking and torquing effects.[[Category:Scientific Paper]] | + | The Trouton-Noble (TN) experiment is often cited for having substantiated the theory of relativity. Trouton and Noble believed that if a high-voltage capacitor experienced a ?spontaneous? jerking and torquing, this behavior would be a manifestation of the existence of the aether. Examination of the TN paper revealed that the experimenters had actually observed and recorded the phenomenon, but dismissed it as experimental error every time. Recent replications of the TN experiment have consistently demonstrated the jerking and torquing effects. |
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+ | [[Category:Scientific Paper|stimulated forces demonstrated trouton-noble experiment failed make succeed]] | ||
[[Category:Relativity]] | [[Category:Relativity]] |
Revision as of 11:07, 1 January 2017
Scientific Paper | |
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Title | Stimulated Forces Demonstrated: Why the Trouton-Noble Experiment Failed and How to Make It Succeed |
Author(s) | Patrick Cornille, Jean-Louis Naudin |
Keywords | aether drift, capacitors, conservation laws, Cornille, covariance, Dring?s paradox, Biefeld-Brown, Michelson-Morley, Newton?s third law, relativity, Trouton-Noble |
Published | 1999 |
Journal | Electric Spacecraft Journal |
Number | 28 |
Pages | 14-23 |
Abstract
The Trouton-Noble (TN) experiment is often cited for having substantiated the theory of relativity. Trouton and Noble believed that if a high-voltage capacitor experienced a ?spontaneous? jerking and torquing, this behavior would be a manifestation of the existence of the aether. Examination of the TN paper revealed that the experimenters had actually observed and recorded the phenomenon, but dismissed it as experimental error every time. Recent replications of the TN experiment have consistently demonstrated the jerking and torquing effects.