Difference between revisions of "Fresnel, Fitzeau, Hoek, Michelson-Morley, Michelson-Gale and Sagnac in Aetherless Galilean Space"
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==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
− | The experiments of Fizeau, et al, in the years 1851-1925 were all designed to test for the motion of the Earth through the presumed aether, or to test for the extent to which the aether was constrained and carried in a moving, material medium. The results of these experiments resulted in the Fresnel coefficient of aether drag and the Lorentz transformations, each designed to explain the nature of the aether as evidenced by the data obtained. Building on these results (and much original thought), Einstein developed the special theory of relativity, keeping many of the results in form, but abandoning the aether. Analysing the results of these experiments without the assumption of an aether eliminates the Fresnel aether drag coefficient, the Lorentz transformation, length contraction and time dilation, and, with thiis, the basis for special relativity. The correct form and value for the solutions are then derived utilizing Galilean transformations. | + | The experiments of Fizeau, et al, in the years 1851-1925 were all designed to test for the motion of the Earth through the presumed aether, or to test for the extent to which the aether was constrained and carried in a moving, material medium. The results of these experiments resulted in the Fresnel coefficient of aether drag and the Lorentz transformations, each designed to explain the nature of the aether as evidenced by the data obtained. Building on these results (and much original thought), Einstein developed the special theory of relativity, keeping many of the results in form, but abandoning the aether. Analysing the results of these experiments without the assumption of an aether eliminates the Fresnel aether drag coefficient, the Lorentz transformation, length contraction and time dilation, and, with thiis, the basis for special relativity. The correct form and value for the solutions are then derived utilizing Galilean transformations. |
− | [[Category:Aether]] | + | [[Category:Scientific Paper|fresnel fitzeau hoek michelson-morley michelson-gale sagnac aetherless galilean space]] |
− | [[Category:Relativity]] | + | |
+ | [[Category:Aether|fresnel fitzeau hoek michelson-morley michelson-gale sagnac aetherless galilean space]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Relativity|fresnel fitzeau hoek michelson-morley michelson-gale sagnac aetherless galilean space]] |
Latest revision as of 19:33, 1 January 2017
Scientific Paper | |
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Title | Fresnel, Fitzeau, Hoek, Michelson-Morley, Michelson-Gale and Sagnac in Aetherless Galilean Space |
Author(s) | Curtis E Renshaw |
Keywords | aether, transformations, relativity |
Published | 1996 |
Journal | Galilean Electrodynamics |
Volume | 7 |
Number | 6 |
Pages | 103-108 |
Abstract
The experiments of Fizeau, et al, in the years 1851-1925 were all designed to test for the motion of the Earth through the presumed aether, or to test for the extent to which the aether was constrained and carried in a moving, material medium. The results of these experiments resulted in the Fresnel coefficient of aether drag and the Lorentz transformations, each designed to explain the nature of the aether as evidenced by the data obtained. Building on these results (and much original thought), Einstein developed the special theory of relativity, keeping many of the results in form, but abandoning the aether. Analysing the results of these experiments without the assumption of an aether eliminates the Fresnel aether drag coefficient, the Lorentz transformation, length contraction and time dilation, and, with thiis, the basis for special relativity. The correct form and value for the solutions are then derived utilizing Galilean transformations.