Difference between revisions of "Electromagnetic Waves: Anomaly? No, Analogy!"

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Wave propagation in a medium itself moving obliquely to the wave motion is investigated, and a general relationship established between the propagation speed and that under still conditions, as a function of the obliquity.  The results of the Michelson-Morley experiment are reconsidered in the light of this relationship.
 
Wave propagation in a medium itself moving obliquely to the wave motion is investigated, and a general relationship established between the propagation speed and that under still conditions, as a function of the obliquity.  The results of the Michelson-Morley experiment are reconsidered in the light of this relationship.
  
Keywords:  Wave propagation, Doppler effect, Special Relativity, Electromagnetics
+
Keywords:  Wave propagation, Doppler effect, Special Relativity, Electromagnetics, Acoustics
  
 
PACS:  03.65.Ge, 03.65.Pm, 03.30.+p, 41.20.Jb
 
PACS:  03.65.Ge, 03.65.Pm, 03.30.+p, 41.20.Jb
  
 
[[Category:Scientific Paper|comment mmx]]
 
[[Category:Scientific Paper|comment mmx]]

Latest revision as of 14:24, 19 December 2021

Scientific Paper
Title Electromagnetic Waves: Anomaly? No, Analogy!
Author(s) Ian J Cowan
Keywords {{{keywords}}}
Published 2018
Journal Galilean Electrodynamics
Volume 29
Number SI 4
Pages 63-71

Abstract

Wave propagation in a medium itself moving obliquely to the wave motion is investigated, and a general relationship established between the propagation speed and that under still conditions, as a function of the obliquity. The results of the Michelson-Morley experiment are reconsidered in the light of this relationship.

Keywords: Wave propagation, Doppler effect, Special Relativity, Electromagnetics, Acoustics

PACS: 03.65.Ge, 03.65.Pm, 03.30.+p, 41.20.Jb