Bryan G Wallace: Difference between revisions
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| alt = Bryan G. Wallace | | alt = Bryan G. Wallace | ||
| birth_date = {{birth date|1933|02|08|mf=y}} | | birth_date = {{birth date|1933|02|08|mf=y}} | ||
| death_date = {{ | | death_date = {{death date|1997|03|19|mf=y}} | ||
| residence = St Petersburg, | | residence = St. Petersburg, Florida, United States | ||
| nationality = | | nationality = American | ||
| known_for = [[ | | known_for = ''[[The Farce of Physics]]''; criticism of [[special relativity]]; radar tests of the velocity of light | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Bryan G. Wallace''' (February 8, 1933 – March 19, 1997) was an American physicist and critic of Albert Einstein's [[special relativity]], based in St. Petersburg, Florida. He is best known for his book ''[[The Farce of Physics]]'' and for his argument that interplanetary radar data show the relative velocity of light in space to be ''c'' + ''v'' rather than the constant ''c'' required by relativity. He was a member of the [[Natural Philosophy Alliance]]. | |||
==Biography== | |||
Wallace described his life's work as a roughly fifty-year career as a physicist devoted to examining the foundations of modern physics. Working outside the academic mainstream, he published a series of papers and letters from the late 1960s onward, principally in ''Spectroscopy Letters'', ''Foundations of Physics'', ''Physics Today'' and later ''Galilean Electrodynamics'' and ''Physics Essays''. | |||
In July 1988 Wallace received a letter from Dr. Svetlana Tolchelnikova-Murri, an astrometrist at the Pulkovo Observatory near Leningrad, who had obtained his radar paper from Dr. Vladimir Sekerin of Novosibirsk and shared his skepticism about the role of relativistic theory in fundamental astrometry. An extensive correspondence followed. At her encouragement, and helped by the greater openness of the ''perestroika'' era, Wallace wrote to dozens of scientists and journalists in the United States seeking observers for dissident conferences on "the problem of space and time" held in Leningrad. He read papers there in 1989 and 1991, at the first two meetings in the series of Soviet and Russian dissident-science conferences, which brought him international attention among relativity critics. Fellow members of the Natural Philosophy Alliance valued his dedication and congenial nature. | |||
Wallace died in March 1997 at the age of 64. | |||
==Scientific contributions== | |||
Wallace's central claim was that published interplanetary radar data — in particular the 1961 radar contact with Venus — provided evidence that the relative velocity of light in space follows the classical (Galilean) addition law ''c'' + ''v'' rather than remaining constant at ''c''. He set out this analysis in his 1969 paper "Radar Testing of the Relative Velocity of Light in Space," published in ''Spectroscopy Letters''. To reconcile laboratory measurements that yield a constant ''c'' with what he read as radar evidence for ''c'' + ''v'', he proposed a model based on a dynamic ether. | |||
Wallace argued that Einstein's second postulate — the constancy of the speed of light — was the linchpin holding modern physics together, and that overturning it would, in his view, expose much of modern physics as "an elaborate farce," a theme he developed at length in ''The Farce of Physics'' (copyright 1993). These conclusions lie well outside the scientific mainstream; the standard interpretation of the same radar and Doppler data is fully consistent with special relativity, and Wallace's reanalysis has not been accepted by the physics community. | |||
'''Articles:''' | '''Articles:''' | ||
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==Abstracts== | ==Abstracts== | ||
* 1991 - "[[Space-time Problem in Modern Physics]]" | * 1991 - "[[Space-time Problem in Modern Physics]]" | ||
* 1986 - "[[Unified Physics Theory | * 1986 - "[[Unified Physics Theory | ||
]]" | ]]" | ||
* 1982 - "[[Unknown]]" | * 1982 - "[[Unknown]]" | ||
* 1969 - "[[Radar Testing of Relative Velocity of Light in Space]]" | * 1969 - "[[Radar Testing of Relative Velocity of Light in Space]]" | ||
==Books== | ==Books== | ||
* 1994 - "[[The Farce of Physics]]" | * 1994 - "[[The Farce of Physics]]" | ||
==External links== | |||
* [http://www.ekkehard-friebe.de/wallace.htm ''The Farce of Physics''] (full text) | |||
* [https://www.gsjournal.net/Science-Journals-Papers/Author/2378/Bryan,%20Wallace Papers by Bryan G. Wallace] at the General Science Journal | |||
[[Category:Scientist|Wallace Bryan]] | [[Category:Scientist|Wallace Bryan]] | ||
Latest revision as of 08:02, 17 July 2026
Bryan G. Wallace | |
|---|---|
| Bryan G. Wallace | |
| Born | February 8, 1933 |
| Died | March 19, 1997 |
| Residence | St. Petersburg, Florida, United States |
| Nationality | American |
| Known for | The Farce of Physics; criticism of special relativity; radar tests of the velocity of light |
Bryan G. Wallace (February 8, 1933 – March 19, 1997) was an American physicist and critic of Albert Einstein's special relativity, based in St. Petersburg, Florida. He is best known for his book The Farce of Physics and for his argument that interplanetary radar data show the relative velocity of light in space to be c + v rather than the constant c required by relativity. He was a member of the Natural Philosophy Alliance.
Biography
Wallace described his life's work as a roughly fifty-year career as a physicist devoted to examining the foundations of modern physics. Working outside the academic mainstream, he published a series of papers and letters from the late 1960s onward, principally in Spectroscopy Letters, Foundations of Physics, Physics Today and later Galilean Electrodynamics and Physics Essays.
In July 1988 Wallace received a letter from Dr. Svetlana Tolchelnikova-Murri, an astrometrist at the Pulkovo Observatory near Leningrad, who had obtained his radar paper from Dr. Vladimir Sekerin of Novosibirsk and shared his skepticism about the role of relativistic theory in fundamental astrometry. An extensive correspondence followed. At her encouragement, and helped by the greater openness of the perestroika era, Wallace wrote to dozens of scientists and journalists in the United States seeking observers for dissident conferences on "the problem of space and time" held in Leningrad. He read papers there in 1989 and 1991, at the first two meetings in the series of Soviet and Russian dissident-science conferences, which brought him international attention among relativity critics. Fellow members of the Natural Philosophy Alliance valued his dedication and congenial nature.
Wallace died in March 1997 at the age of 64.
Scientific contributions
Wallace's central claim was that published interplanetary radar data — in particular the 1961 radar contact with Venus — provided evidence that the relative velocity of light in space follows the classical (Galilean) addition law c + v rather than remaining constant at c. He set out this analysis in his 1969 paper "Radar Testing of the Relative Velocity of Light in Space," published in Spectroscopy Letters. To reconcile laboratory measurements that yield a constant c with what he read as radar evidence for c + v, he proposed a model based on a dynamic ether.
Wallace argued that Einstein's second postulate — the constancy of the speed of light — was the linchpin holding modern physics together, and that overturning it would, in his view, expose much of modern physics as "an elaborate farce," a theme he developed at length in The Farce of Physics (copyright 1993). These conclusions lie well outside the scientific mainstream; the standard interpretation of the same radar and Doppler data is fully consistent with special relativity, and Wallace's reanalysis has not been accepted by the physics community.
Articles:
- Spectros. Lett., 2, 361 (1969).
- Spectros. Lett., 3, 115 (1970).
- Spectros. Lett., 4, 79 (1971).
- Spectros. Lett., 4, 123 (1971).
- Found. Phys., 3, 381 (1973).
- R. A. Rhodes II, W. F. Block, B. G. Wallace, Rev. Sci. Instrum., 46, 1710(1975).
- W. F. Block, C. Floyd, R. A. Rhodes II, B. G. Wallace, J. Chem. Phys., 66, 2108(1977).
- Physics Today, 34(8), 11 (1981).
- Physics Today, 36(1), 11 (1983).
- Physics Today, 36(8), 13 (1983).
- Physics Today, 36(9), 111 (1983).
- Scientific Ethics, 1(3), 3 (1985).
- Physics Today, 37(6), 15 (1984).
- J. Clas. Phys., 1(2), 17 (1982). (with R. A. Rhodes & W. F. Block)
- Speculations Sci. Technol. 9, 9 (1986).
- Sci. Ethics 1(1), 2 (1985).
- Galilean Electrodynamics, 1(2), 23(1990).
- Physics Essays, 3(1), 94(1990).
Abstracts
- 1991 - "Space-time Problem in Modern Physics"
- 1986 - "[[Unified Physics Theory
]]"
- 1982 - "Unknown"
- 1969 - "Radar Testing of Relative Velocity of Light in Space"
Books
- 1994 - "The Farce of Physics"
External links
- The Farce of Physics (full text)
- Papers by Bryan G. Wallace at the General Science Journal